While I’m away, I let my friends come out to play. Welcome Shayla Kersten… ~DD
Imagination is such a quirky thing. Where would we be without it? Probably extinct. *cackle* Human imagination has given us inventions from rudimentary weapons of survival to spaceflight. And in the process, unleashed the written word on a world curious to know everything from vampires to alternate realities to aliens.
I’ve been in love with the idea of space since I was six years old watching the original Star Trek on an old black and white television. What an amazing thing for someone to dream of! And then there we were…humans…men from earth catapulting into space atop massive rockets, walking on the moon. I still get chills remembering that fateful July day and those words—“One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind”. I just knew the future held the starship Enterprise, alien creatures and amazing explorations. I wanted so bad to be part of it, to explore space, to go where no man—or woman—had gone before. *le sigh*
Alas, being blind as a bat ruled out anything to do with flight. A lack of ability with real science limited my options. The closest I came to my dream was the military. I mean, the Federation was a military of sorts, although it espoused peace. After all, they used military ranks, right?
So instead of exploring outer space, I turned to the space between my ears. My head was full of ideas for all kinds of stories. I wrote stories of cops and vampires, of men loving men and happily ever after. But I hesitated when it came to scifi. I had some ideas but not a clear enough picture to explore a universe of my own creation. Until last year.
In a chat, our most adorable Delilah asked readers what stories they’d like to see from her or from me. Brandy W spoke up. She said she wanted to see something from me with vampires and angels. Hmmm… Okey dokie. My brain did a double take. I already have a vampire series—Eternity—and I still needed to finish the last book for it. But it was an interesting idea. Okay. I filed the prompt—vamps and angels—away for later. And went on with the stories I had in process.
A few months later a lot of buzz came around about space opera being big. You know the type of story, Star Trek, Star Wars, Firefly… Cowboys in space kind of thing. Okay… My brain took a left turn. Vamps, angels, space… Vamps, angels, space… And the next thing you know, ANGEL MOON is born. The first in a trilogy of stories with more to possibly come. I’m already into book two and book three is nagging me for attention. Hopefully, the words will flow as fast as the ideas are now! *cackle*
ANGEL MOON
By Shayla Kersten
Copyright © SHAYLA KERSTEN, 2010
Now available at Ellora’s Cave
For all of Shayla’s Ellora’s Cave’s book, check out her page
For more about Shayla check out her website
What the story’s all about:
Terra offers sanctuary to Angellum and Virkola. Unknown to the natives, a truce exists there. To Terrans, the two species exist as myths. One is a frail winged creature from religious texts. The other, a demon of the night, living off blood. Both are far from the truth…
Sorin thought sanctuary was the answer to their problems. Terra with its plentiful creatures, full of fresh blood and off limits to the millennia long war with the Angellum—who wouldn’t think it paradise? Except paradise comes at a high price. Claiming a bounty on a renegade angel hasn’t ended up the way he planned.
Teo loves his ship, his life in space, but he loves Sorin more. The plan seems sound but the bounty is a fraud and now the price is on him and Sorin. He’ll make the best of the rest of his life with Sorin, even if it were only a few weeks.
But when hope appears from an unexpected source, both men grab chance by the wings.
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
“You and your fucking bright ideas!” Teo dodged behind a stack of crates as heat sizzled past his leg. The acrid smell of ozone raised the hair on his neck. Popping out from behind his cover, he squeezed off a burst of return fire. Sweat matted his hair and kept trickling down his forehead and into his eyes. The thin atmosphere made every breath a chore. He rubbed his coat sleeve across his face but the water-resistant material just moved the sweat around and added grit to the mix.
Sorin rested his ass against the wall. The heavy bundle draped over his shoulder forced him to lean forward. His ragged breathing spaced out his words. “If you…would have landed…closer we’d be in flight by now.”
“Yeah, yeah, yeah… We’ve had this argument already.” Thin air and hard exercise was a bad combination. “Sensor blind spot here…other side not. Almost there.” Teo didn’t bother to look for a target. Sticking his hand around the corner, he fired a fast volley. He jerked back as another blast from their pursuers smoked the corner of the crate. “Move!”
With a deep breath, Sorin pushed away from the wall. He resettled the burden on his shoulder then took off at a fast trot. Even as big as he was, Sorin struggled with their prize.
“Better him than me.” With a final random blast toward the men chasing them, Teo followed his shipmate.
Even if this crazy idea weren’t Sorin’s, he’d be doing the muscle work. Sorin was taller than Teo by at least six inches and his body broader. He was bigger than any Virkolan Teo had ever met. Almost considered a giant, Sorin brought a certain amount of prestige to the ship, and to Teo.
Heat singed Teo’s right arm. Gritting his teeth against a yell, he switched his blaster to his left hand and returned fire. No sense in giving their pursuers the satisfaction of knowing they’d hit something.
As they rounded a corner, the warehouse door gaped open like a giant mouth. Dawn lightened the darkness to a heavy gray.
“Damn…” Teo wanted to be off planet before first light. Less likely for the angry mob behind him to see any identifiable markings on his ship. The entire mission was gone to hell. He should have known better.
The small smuggling and cargo jobs they’d scrounged up lately had barely paid enough for provisions, but at least they hadn’t had anyone shooting at them.
“Move it!” Teo stopped at the corner. Sorin would need at least a few seconds lead to get the ship’s hatch open. Firing off a couple of shots, Teo chanced a quick peek around the corner.
Even in the dim lights of the warehouse, the Angellum were easy to see. Their milky skin almost glowed. With no room for lift, they’d furled their wings, leaving a small vee of white feathers jutting skyward to frame their heads.
A shudder sped down Teo’s spine. He’d never been so close to the Angellum before. His war efforts were spent on the Compensa. While it looked like a small trader, he’d retrofitted it with weapons. He laid claim to bringing down an enemy troop transport. A small one but it counted. He’d also taken out three of their long-range scouts. Although those were mostly self-defense. Smuggling decent weapons to Vikola was his most valuable contribution to the eons-old war.
Teo fired another volley, scattering the creatures. A flurry of return fire slammed into the wall. Wood splintered under the impact. Scorched wood added to the odor of burning air.
The low-charge warning on his blaster beeped. “Fuck!” Ready or not… Teo squeezed off one final shot then sprinted toward the warehouse door. His lungs burned from lack of oxygen. Muscles all over his body screamed for more. He darted through the door then made a sharp left. Blaster fire peppered the wall near the opening.
The Compensa squatted thirty-something feet away. The ungainly ship looked like a fat-bottomed gasa squatting on a nest. The wide bottom normally held cargo. Today, the door gaped open to an empty hold.
Another few yards… Lightheaded, Teo stumbled, feet dragging. Sorin…love you…
“Come on, asshole. Don’t you dare quit on me now!”
Who you calling asshole? Indignation increased his resolve. Kick your ass… Gasping for air, Teo dove for the open hatch.
Blaster fire flew over his head in both directions. Sorin stood over him with a long gun, returning cover fire as the hatch slid closed. Thuds marked the Angellum’s continued volley. Sorin kicked an oxygen tank toward Teo.
Grabbing the mask, Teo inhaled deep for the first time since they left the ship over an hour ago.
“Come on, flyboy. Let’s get this bitch out of here.” Sorin grabbed him by the arm, almost dragging him toward the door.
“Where’s your load?” He’d be pissed if Sorin lost it after all. Teo glanced around. The heavy canvas bag was stuffed into the open enviro-suit closet.
A secondary hatch slid open. Teo ran into the corridor. “You get that secured.” Reenergized by the oxygen-rich mix in the main part of the ship, Teo climbed the short ladder to the helm right above them. “I’ll get us out of here.”
Slamming into his seat, he grabbed the flight yoke. His left thumb hit the standby button on the left control, freeing the yoke and the engines. His right thumb pressed the comm control. “Hang on!” He took a deep breath. Yanking hard on the yoke, Teo took the ship straight up. The back blast from the engines pointing down on full thrust should take care of anyone too close.
Acceleration sucked him back in his seat. High gravity forced the air from his lungs.
“Fuck!” Sorin’s yell echoed through the comm, making Teo smile.
Serves him right after this mission. Then again, if his mate was correct, this could be their last mission. Once they delivered their booty, they’d have enough credits to retire to Terra.
As the atmosphere thinned, the welcome sight of black space greeted him. Teo wasn’t sure he wanted to retire. He knew he’d miss this. He’d been reared on a ship, with nomadic mothers seeking solace from the war in the quiet of space. And what about the war? Running off to the sanctuary of Terra made him feel like a traitor.
However, Sorin was a dirtsider. He still had bouts of space sickness on occasion, but at least here he was safe from slavery—or worse—by the Angellum.
Vicious creatures, the Angellum had occupied parts of the Virkolan homeworld for nearly two millennium. Pockets of Virkola stayed, fighting a war of resistance or just eking out an existence in hiding. Others fled for the stars, entire families stuffed into ships too small with nowhere to go or cold space stations—living off dried provisions or meager prey. A few other planets had outposts where Virkolans were able to live, but they existed because the Angellum let them. Most assumed it was because there was no room for angels to fly.
Virkolans were a peaceful people, they didn’t have many weapons to fight off invaders. Since they hunted with the intention of taking their prey alive, most of their weapons were nonlethal.
Teo had done his part by smuggling real weapons to the resistance. He’d met Sorin on one of those trips. It had taken a lot of convincing to get him to leave with Teo. And Sorin’s clan wasn’t happy losing the gentle giant.
He grinned as he set the heading for the rendezvous. The convincing had been a lot of fun. Finally Sorin had agreed. Now they were bonded, living apart wasn’t something they’d even consider. And Teo liked making Sorin happy.
For whatever reason, the Angellum ignored Terra. The few who lived there stayed hidden, living as legends and myths. Since Terrans had very short lifespans, beings like the Angellum and Virkola were easy to believe as folklore.
As the ship’s sublight engines kicked in, a noise from below warned Teo of a visitor. Flipping the ship on auto, he pulled his weapon from the holster. Pain screamed through his wounded arm.
“Sorin?”
“Yes.” Sorin’s voice floated through the open flood hatch. “You were expecting someone else.” Sorin’s head popped up. “I brought you something to eat. Plus, I need to treat your arm.” He shoved his medkit across the floor then came up the ladder to the helm.
Teo’s good luck had someone with a healer’s skill fall in love with him.
One hand carried a small, heavy plas-board box. Scratches and small growls indicated the occupant’s irritation. “Here.” Sorin held out the cage.
“I don’t need that.” Even though it would help healing. “We don’t have many live ones left.”
“I know, but once we’re finished with this job, we won’t have to worry about it. We’ll have plenty.”
If they finished this job. A sense of foreboding had hung around since Sorin first got word about it. Supplying arms to the resistance was one thing. Quite another to deal with the Angellum themselves.
While the creatures displayed a pale, ethereal beauty, their souls were as dark as space. And twice as cold. They’d invaded Virkola without any provocation. Even now, no one knew for sure why. Envoys sent to talk were returned dead, shredded into pieces by vicious claws. Virkolan slaves might have an answer, but no one ever escaped captivity.
The Angellum ruled Virkola from the highest mountains or sky cities. Not easy places to escape. Or attack. Of course the height wasn’t a problem for the winged angels.
“Just take it. You need the strength. I can’t keep this bucket of bolts flying with you laid up in the infirmary.”
“Well, that’s not exactly true.”
While Sorin knew the basics of flying the Compensa, he wasn’t very good at it. Taking off and flying straight were about his limits. Landings had been…interesting.
“Ha, ha. Drink.”
Teo took the offered meal. Maybe it would get rid of the rest of his lightheadedness.
“Let me see that arm.”
“I can’t do both at the same time. Make up your mind which.”
Sorin’s left eyebrow rose in a delicate arch. Sure sign of the beginning of an argument. “Eat first.”
“Thanks.” Arguments could be fun because they were usually settled in bed. Then again, between his aching muscles and the searing pain from the blaster, he didn’t know if he’d be up to sex. Best not to irritate his mate when he was in no shape to distract his ire.
Teo opened the cage. The small, ugly creature protested with a flurry of squeals and squeaks. Teo wrapped his fingers around the dark brown rodent then lifted it to his mouth. Teo’s fangs slid free. A quick bite on the soft underbelly filled his mouth with blood. Sucking hard, he drained the rat. He slipped the carcass back into the box. He and Sorin would eat the meat later when they were settled in flight.
Rats were never enough to sate a Virkolan but it helped stave off a range of illnesses brought on by lack of fresh blood. The jolt would help Teo heal but not much more than that.
If this deal went down the way it was supposed to, they’d be able to retire on Terra…called Earth by the local population. It was said that Terran blood was almost intoxicating. And some people were pleased to let them feed. Although Teo couldn’t think of the specifics, humans had another name for Virkolans. Even had legends about them and their origins—all of them so far from the truth it was funny.
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I for one am glad that you use that space between your ears to explore space. I’m also glad that you have no problem taking a tiny idea from someone and turning it into something I never would have thought of.
I’m confident that your new series will be a hit with everyone. Congrats.
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Ooh… great excerpt, Shayla! What an exciting start to your new series!
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Good luck. Hope it’s a MAJOR hit with your fans.
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*GIANT HUGS* Brandy! I’m thankful you mentioned that tiny idea! *cackle* I have a bunch of stories dying to get out in this universe.
Thank you, Fedora! I hope people think the story is fun. It’s definitely different from my usual stories. Although I’m not giving up my gay cops or traditional vamps!
Hiya, Cyndi! Thank you! I wish you were going to be around soon. We need to do lunch!
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Tinkled pink you listened up, Shayla. We get some great ideas that way and for what it’s worth, I’m pretty damn glad you applied that brainpower and imagination in books instead of trolling the universe. Heck, we’d never see you, honey.
Dating myself too, but I also recall the moon walk on our old black and white tv. Still gives me goosebumps to think of it.
Happy release day!
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Thanks for stopping by, Regina! Yes, ideas can come from the strangest places.
On dating myself, I’ve kind of given up on denying my age. I hit the big five-oh next month. I’ve decided to look on it as a journey. I’ve witnessed history in the technological developments over the last fifty years. LOL
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WTG on the unique plot line, Shayla. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: You get the most gorgeous hunks on the covers of your books… and they’re impervious to girly-girl wiles. 😆
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Betty! *cackle* Yes, the cover gods have been kind to me. And I thank Brandy for the initial plot bunny. Angels just weren’t something I really thought about writing.
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Vampires to angels–that is a creative stretch, but you pulled it off. I enjoyed your post. Best of luck with your release!
–Adele
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Shayla! It was so much fun to meet you at Romanticon. This looks like a fabulous new series! Way to go!
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Thank you, Adele! I had a little help on that. Brandy W (the first one commenting here) threw out the idea of vamps and angels in the same story. Took me a while but the scifi aspect made it work! LOL
Hiya, Cindy! Thank you! I can’t wait for RomantiCon this year! I had such a blast! It’ll be great seeing everyone again!
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Shayla! Thanks for standing in for me!