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The Fantasy
Star Miniology,
Three sci-fi romantic, erotica tales,
by Mae Powers
Can you imagine having all your
fantasies come true while traveling through the cosmos, on a
futuristic cruise ship? Well then, welcome aboard The
Fantasy Star, where all pleasures are possible in space.
Imagine you’re the ship’s captain, or you’re the tri-level
chief bartender; or even the cruise director of
entertainment, or even the ship’s engineer. All work and no
play? Not for this crew. But hey, you can be one of the many
passengers who can achieve some otherwise unobtainable
fantasy pleasure you’d like to experience. Then join us on
this space-faring leisure liner for entertainment beyond
your wildest dreams.
Welcome Aboard, Story One. Captain Mera LaFayte, of The Fantasy Star, learns from visiting alien
hunk, Captain Roc Devahl, how some close encounters
can be a very tantalizing experience.
Station
Sexx,
Story Two.
At Space Station Sexx, Supply Officer, Tantra Evans, finds
getting needed supplies turns out be an unusual
intergalactic exchange of sensual fun.
Guest
Relations,
Story Three.
Guest Marla Samuels' soured vacation becomes a scrumptious
night of pleasure in one of the elite holo-suites, where
Marla cannot find anything to complain about.
Monstrous Passions
An Eerily Sensual
Miniology
Three speculative romantically schintillating tales,
by Marguerite Turnley
A Taste For Blood
Life sucks for Carl. He’s a vampire with a conscience.
Blood is what he must have but he’s picky about who he
bites. Working at the meat processing plant is a short-term
solution. Carl leaps over rooftops until he finds a soul
mate. Valerie is into betrayal and other nasty activities.
Serena is more to his taste. It all comes to a head when the
knives come out.
Robotic Wet Dreams
When Peter woke on a slab in a laboratory, he realized
it was all a dream. Metal implants did not make him a man.
His creator did. Then he found out he had company and they
were all female. How could he escape? Did he even want to?
Bleeding Hearts
Pip has decisions to make. He can become anyone or
anything he chooses. Shape shifting is what he does. It’s a
family tradition. Just don’t turn your back on your
relatives. They might bite you when you’re not looking.
Azure Masquerade
by Megan Hussey
Chapter One
The sight of ruby-hued rose petals, strewn with
sensual abandon across sheets of azure satin, always aroused
Lillith Munroe.
Yet on this evening, with these sheets bathed in the golden
rays of a forlorn, solitary moon, this arousal became tinged
with an undeniable sadness. In evenings past, Lillith shared
the soft, slick sheets of her Victorian four-poster bed with
her husband Gregory. The two tumbled often into the
luxurious depths of their bed - prompting Lillith to stare
wondrously at the silken pastel canopy that oversaw their
nightly trysts.
Although a happily and properly married couple, they never
gave up on caressing, flirting, or, if the mood hit, even
making love.
During the course of their five-year union, they exchanged
their modest college apartment at Port Emerald University
for an expansive, two-story, ivory-hued home on nearby Port
Emerald Beach. And they traded in their student ID cards for
a small business license. Their rec room became a home
office for the fastly growing Munroe Marketing Firm. And the
multicolored rock’n’roll poster that once adorned their
ceiling was replaced with a luminous, two-tiered chandelier.
Even so, the couple never stopped ‘making out’ or ‘sneaking
around’ - sometimes even venturing into the
velvet-upholstered backseat of Gregory’s restored 1945 Rolls
Royce.
Although admittedly the site of some interesting marital
memories, Lillith now hoped with fervor that she would never
see the car again; though she knew in her heart that the
Rolls was not responsible for her husband’s deadly accident.
Six months ago, the actions of a drunken, reckless driver
ended Gregory’s life. As a blissfully unaware Lillith lay
asleep in the couple’s bed, her husband’s car was pummeled
in a violent collision on a dark, rainy road.
“That was the last night he lived,” thought Lillith. “And
the last night I truly slept.”
Even so, it helped sometimes to play the old jazz CDs, pour
the glass of crystalline champagne, and coat their sheets
with a fresh supply of radiant rose petals in bloom.
“Just so something in this house feels alive,” she thought.
* * * *
The decorative French doors that bordered Lillith’s master
bedroom suffused the next morning with a kaleidoscope of
light, rays adorned beautifully by a Florida sun.
She shifted slightly in her bed, finally sitting up to greet
the morning with a smile, something she hadn’t been wont to
do since her husband died many long months ago.
“Despite the great temptation to do so, I can’t lie here
wrapped up in my sheets like a mummified pasta shell,” she
mused. “After all, if Gregory and I are going to work in a
morning jog. . .”
Suddenly, she fell back against the pillows, her chest
constricting with the hard, unyielding weight of a certain
truth. Her husband never would make another morning jog. And
she wasn’t altogether sure she would make it through another
day.
Again sitting upright in her soft satin sheets, Lillith
buried her head in her hands and let loose with a torrent of
tears.
Weeping, while often considered therapeutic, was only a
means of temporary relief for the newly minted widow. She
knew the anguish would return - perhaps a bit less
dramatically next time, or maybe in a different form.
Yet it would return. In a life turned upside down, that was
the only certainty she felt left.
A loud, annoying ring of her doorbell disrupted Lillith’s
troubled meditation.
“Who is it and how quickly can they go away?” she pondered,
rising with great reluctance to her feet.
Lillith pasted an abiding smile on her face as she donned a
long pink robe and made her way down the spiral staircase
that lead to her living room.
She knew people meant well when they delivered gifts of
brownies and homespun advice. Yet sometimes, she felt too
weary, too impossibly drained, to respond to their
kindnesses.
Even so, she always managed a smile of thanks, and greeted
her friends warmly as she welcomed them to her home.
That is, until this morning. For when she greeted the man
who now stood at her doorstep, a dozen dew-glistened pink
carnations clutched dutifully in his grasp, her smile turned
to a barely concealed sneer. And her intended greeting of
“Good morning” morphed into a hearty “What the hell?”
The man who faced her threw back his leonine head, his azure
eyes crinkling as he laughed openly at Lillith’s exquisite
word choice.
“That’s my Lilly,” he praised, leaning forward to plant an
affectionate kiss on her cheek.
I Dream of Eugene
by Jamie Hill
The dusty little store appeared crowded with merchandise, if
not shoppers. Macy Green looked over the eclectic collection
of oddities in Madame Zena’s Mystical Shoppe, amazed
at the various loads of crap the old woman tried to pass off
as antiques. She eyed the dozens of brass items, all badly
in need of polish, and a collection of old oriental rugs.
“Suppose these carpets fly?” She fingered one and looked up
at her friend Tina, browsing on the other side of the
counter.
“Yeah, you bet.” Tina chuckled absently, digging through a
small jewelry box. She held up a pair of dangly turquoise
earrings. “Hey, Mace, look here. Don’t these look like real
silver?”
“Let me see.” Macy took the earrings and studied them
closely. “Nah, I don’t think so. But they’re pretty, and you
look good in turquoise. You should get them.”
Tina took the earrings back and held them up to her ears,
looking at herself in an old mirror on the wall. “I do like
them. They make me look like Cher, circa 1970.” She flipped
her long black hair over one shoulder and raised her
eyebrows. “Whadaya think? Gypsy, tramp, or thief?”
Macy laughed at the old song and nodded. “Definitely gypsy.
I like the look a lot.”
“Okay, I’ll get them. But you have to buy something, too.”
“Uh, gee, Teen, I don’t know.” Macy looked skeptically over
the rest of the items on the counter. She glanced at the old
woman sitting up front and said quietly, “I don’t really see
anything that’s my style.”
“Keep looking.” Tina wandered through the small store and
stopped when she got to the back, where a half-drawn curtain
attempted to close off the storage room. “Oh Macy, look.”
She marched into the back room and grabbed a blue bottle off
a table.
Macy followed her to the back room and whispered harshly,
“What are you doing?”
“This is so cool!” Tina held up the bottle. “Very retro."
“Totally,” Macy agreed, secretly admiring the bottle. It was
cornflower blue with silver accents, and reminded her of a
genie bottle from the days of Aladdin.
“It looks like Jeannie’s bottle from the TV show!” Tina
waved it at her. “I loved that show. I have to get this.”
“Ezz not for sale.” The woman from the front counter
appeared in the doorway to the storage area. “You not
allowed back here. Out! Out!”
“I’m sorry.” Tina turned on the charm, and Macy smiled. Her
friend was a public relations agent for a very big company
in Chicago. If anyone could talk the old woman out of the
bottle, Tina Brewster was the woman for the job. “I spotted
this beautiful bottle here on the counter,
and it just called to me. You have such lovely things in
your shop. I’m having trouble deciding what to buy!”
“Ezz not for sale,” she repeated and reached for the bottle.
Tina smiled and held it just out of reach. “Madame Zena…you
are Madame Zena, aren’t you?” The woman nodded, and Tina
continued, “I have a real love for things from this era. I’m
sure we can agree on a price that will make both of us quite
happy.”
Madame Zena looked in Tina’s eyes and then seemed to study
the bottle in her hands. After a moment, she looked back up
at Tina and shook her head. “Ezz not for sale.” She reached
for the bottle, but Tina jerked it backwards.
“Tina,” Macy said, embarrassed. Persistence was one thing,
but sometimes too much could be foolish. “She doesn’t want
to sell the bottle. Let’s get the earrings and go.”
Tina smiled through gritted teeth and said, “But I want it.”
Macy gritted her teeth and smiled right back. “You’re acting
like a spoiled brat. Put the stupid bottle down, and let’s
go.”
She reached for the bottle, and it practically jumped into
her hands.
“What the hell?” Macy held on firmly with both hands until
the bottle stopped shaking. “That was bizarre.”
“What?” Tina asked, irritated. She obviously hadn’t noticed
the shaking that Macy felt.
Perhaps it was all in her mind. Macy gave the bottle a
little shake, and it shook back at her. She glanced up at
Tina, who seemed oblivious to anything unusual.
“Ah ha.” Madame Zena smiled widely, exposing several missing
teeth and a chaw of chewing tobacco. She nodded and winked
at Macy. “For you, twenty dollars.”
“For her, twenty dollars?” Tina screeched. “You’ll sell it
to her but not me?”
The old woman closed her eyes and shrugged.
Tina looked at Macy and smiled, nodding her head quickly.
“Buy it.”
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