Most wanted alien brides, p.1

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Most Wanted Alien Brides


  MOST WANTED ALIEN BRIDES:

  INTERGALACTIC DATING AGENCY VOL 1

  CANDICE GILMER

  CONTENTS

  Slammer

  Most Wanted Alien Brides Series

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Epilogue

  Hard Time

  Most Wanted Alien Brides Series

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Epilogue

  Solitary

  Prologue

  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

  Epilogue

  Intergalactic Dating Agency

  Want More Rhimodians?

  The Temptress’s Cyborg

  About the Author

  Other Books by Candice Gilmer

  This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locale or organizations is entirely coincidental.

  Flirtation Publishing

  Wichita, KS

  Slammer

  Hard Time

  Solitarty

  Copyright © 2021 by Candice Gilmer

  Cover by The Book Brander

  Most Wanted Alien Brides

  Intergalactic Dating Agency Vol 1

  Copyright © 2022 by Candice Gilmer

  Cover by The Book Brander

  * * *

  All Rights Are Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  MOST WANTED ALIEN BRIDES SERIES

  INTERGALACTIC DATING AGENCY

  When the Intergalactic Dating Agency mistakes a prison ship for their new clients looking for mates, cyborg Kolvin jumps at the opportunity. A new life, with the bonus of a ready-made wife? How can this go badly?

  But when Kolvin meets his mate, she winds up not being what he expects.

  She drives him crazy. She's not even from his dimension. His Craving, however, wants what it wants, and he finds himself at the mercy of it.

  Tina Craige, an astronomer from Earth, is pretty sure she's dead. After all, one does not walk through an excavated arch and wind up in another dimension. Especially not in one where a giant cyborg humanoid wants her as a mate.

  When she discovers that he's traumatized from being held prisoner of war, she can't bring herself to abandon him. Not yet.

  She has thirty days to accept this giant cyborg as her mate, PTSD and all, or return to her dimension and Earth, as if she'd never left. And never see, or remember, him again.

  Will she be able to give up everything for her cyborg mate?

  PROLOGUE

  INTERGALACTIC DATING AGENCY MAIN OFFICES

  "Have you seen my coffee, Comet?" Jorak asked as he looked around his messy office. Papers were everywhere, and he knew that he'd brought in the coffee. An incredible brew he'd discovered on the pre-space dimension of the Terran system, the world they called Earth.

  He had traveled there a few times, stocking up on the delicious brew. It was just the right level of bitterness to balance the sweets he usually required. Part of Jorak's chemistry needed a lot of sweet sustenance. But like many with a palete that swung one way, one craved the things that did not fit his diet. Like sour, bitter, and savory things.

  His pet, a starline called Comet, leaped onto his desk. The feline with large, floppy ears and purple dotted fur purred as he flicked his double-tail around the desk.

  And the flick of one of the tails found the coffee, spilling it everywhere.

  "Comet!" Jorak said and reached to grab the animal and put him on the floor, away from the controls.

  Though it didn't matter.

  Comet dove away, bouncing on the control panels before taking off and running out of the office, faster than Jorak could catch him.

  He scrambled to clean up the spilled coffee. "Foolish pet," he muttered. "I really should let him wander through one of the portals some time. See how good he has it here." The pet was still his, obnoxious or not, and he didn't want him to wind up on a different planet in a neighboring dimension. Who knows what would happen to him there.

  Comet wasn't raised to be on his own.

  Sometimes, though, Jorak wondered why he brought him to work. After all, the Intergalactic Dating Agency's authority would not be too keen on him bringing his pet.

  Not that anyone checked down on this level. Here, the portals were built and distributed. That's all that Jorak did. Hard enough work--getting the portals launched and placed on the appropriate planets, in the correct dimensions.

  That was new.

  The Intergalactic Dating Agency didn't always do multi-dimensional searches to find someone's perfect mate. Only when occasionally mating a client was more challenging than expected. Though the last few years, it was becoming more and more of a necessity.

  That's where Jorak came in.

  He set up and controlled the portals for bringing people back and forth between dimensions.

  Unlike when all are on the same dimensional plane, that was easy. It required arranging travel between systems. The inter-dimensional matches, though? Those were a little trickier. More formulas, more equipment, and more data.

  He maintained the portals and kept them programmed.

  Today, he worked on a new portal that needed to be placed on his favorite coffee spot. The higher-ups believed they needed a new location readied with one of the circular rings.

  The coffee cleaned up, Jorak turned back to the controls. He started reading the displays and shook his head.

  "Comet," he muttered as he flipped all the controls back to their original settings.

  "Programming and instigating," he said as he flipped a few controls. The display showed a portal ring--they were eight-foot rings that stood up vertically. Markings on the inner and outer circles handled the controls and the information about what they were. Written in Standard, most planets were able to understand the text without any difficulty. There were several designs, and as per IDA protocols, they were designed to match their surroundings as much as possible.

  A location had been selected on Earth, in a cave, which allowed for good natural concealment. The elements in the cave walls would help funnel the energy as needed.

  It was easier to have something that candidates could walk into and not be seen moving through. It kept the local population otherwise occupied. The portals are only activated if a potential match walks through anyway. So, if, say, a young one wandered through, playing as a child would, they would not activate it.

  Jorak ran over the controls again.

  "It looks like everything is set for portal Terra-129-B."

  He ran over the controls again, double-checking the numbers.

  He nodded his head. "Yes. That will work."

  He launched the portal.

  Outside his window, he saw the stone portal blink twice and disappear.

  He scanned his telemetry.

  Took a sip of his coffee.

  Then looked back.

  The portal arrived. As requested, in a cave.

  Scans immediately started coming back.

  "What in the world?" The arch was being slammed by water, and the systems had to compensate.

  He started attempting to adjust the settings from there.

  That's when he noticed it.

  The portal's destination had been changed, just by a couple of digits.

  But enough that the portal was not only in the wrong location--on a beach, under water--but about three hundred years earlier than it was supposed to be set up.

  He spat out a curse.

  Tapped a few more controls.

  And sighed.

  Comet came back into the room and sat on his hind legs, staring up at him. The ears flopped around his face.

  "You sent a perfect portal to an underwater cave."

  Comet merely started licking his paw.

  He shook his head.

  The higher-ups were going to find out about this.

  Maybe Jorak should get his resume ready for new job applications because this may be the screw-up that gets him fired.

  1

  "Move, Rhimodian," snarled the Terran guard.

  Kolvin twisted around and started to climb out of the bunk from his cell. His body ached, as it did every day. If his internal sensors were working and not being jammed, he would have detected that he was hungry as well.

  Unfortunately, all he had was the rumbles of his stomach. Stuck in a Terran Empire priso n, his cybernetics signals were blocked from any kind of transmissions and connection to the Rhimodian community. Left to deal with his primal side, the natural Rhimodian in him had begun becoming more dominant as well as the other cyborgs who had been taken captive.

  They had survived the last five years in this dark and dingy metal prison. The only places with light were the medical bays where the experiments were done--and not even those were very bright. Just illuminated enough to show how unkempt the ship was.

  Prisoners were not given luxury accommodations.

  Kolvin, like his fellow mates, had to draw on older, more primitive pieces of themselves to survive.

  Kolvin stood, and the Terran guard may have only come to his shoulder, but the stun stick in his hand made up for the difference in size.

  And the guards here were liberal with delivering punishment for anyone who dared to defy them.

  "What now?" Kolvin asked.

  "Are you deaf, robot? Do you need your ears reprogrammed?"

  "This is not routine," Kolvin said.

  The guards would not be greeting them for another three standard hours. This should be their recuperation cycle. They didn't get a great deal of rest time, but it seemed to remain regular.

  He concluded that if they woke him early, there must be something going on.

  "Well, we like to shake things up," the guard said and shoved him forward. His feet slapped on the rough and cold metal floor.

  He saw that he was not the only Rhimodian awoken and shoved out of his cell. Others who had been captured along with him were being herded out of their cells as well.

  "What do you want now?" Marcin, another Rhimodian in his unit, demanded from a few cells away.

  "Get in line," the guard said and slammed him in the shoulder.

  Kolvin gritted his teeth as Marcin was hit again.

  "Move!" the guard behind Kolvin said.

  It was his turn to be struck.

  Fourteen thousand eight hundred and seven.

  The number of times he'd been hit since being brought to this prison five standard years ago.

  "Get going. We haven't got all day."

  Another strike.

  Fourteen thousand eight hundred and eight.

  He shouldn't care how many times, but he kept counting it. Kept it logged in his memories. Along with everything else that had been done. Every poke, every slice, every attack on his person. The number of times they tried to remove his lysteel gauntlets. The scars on his arms were evident of all the attempts by the Terran Empire to remove the tech to learn how it worked.

  They were never able to remove them.

  But not after many hours of trying.

  It wasn't the only procedure that was performed on him and his fellow Rhimodians. Genetic code extraction and testing. Some had not survived, but the Terrans determined quickly that the Rhimodian tech died with the cyborg, so they quit killing them. Then they just performed their experiments on live cyborgs.

  He could not begin to imagine all the things that were done. More than once, he'd offer to leave them with the nanites.

  So, they would let them all go.

  But it wasn't what the Terran wanted.

  He wasn't sure they knew what they wanted. It seemed to change all the time.

  They blocked the connection to the Rhimodian collective consciousness, Master System, through Terran's cloaking technology. Being cut off from the ever-present voice felt like being stripped to the bone. All that they had to confirm who they were and what their protocols were, gone in an instant.

  "Move it, Solkan," another guard said, and this one did make Kolvin look over. Solkan was left in solitary for a reason. A growl emerged from inside the cell. If the Terrans learned anything about Solkan, it was that the Rhimodian fought everything.

  Today was no exception.

  One of the guards flew out of the cell and hit the metal ground hard.

  Marcin smirked. He was hit again for his obstinance.

  Kolvin watched as they brought out Solkan, restrained on both sides by shock braces.

  Solkan shifted, a jerk of strength, and it startled the Terran guards, but it wasn't enough to break the hold.

  When they were lined up, the guards started to lead them out of the cell area and reached the door where they went for testing. Today, though, they did not go to that door. Instead, they were led the other way.

  The round exit door. The one that led to the vacuum of space.

  Kolvin's shoulders sunk.

  The thing he knew would happen had finally come. The Terrans were disposing of them.

  Jettisoning them out into space.

  More than once, they'd opened the air lock to suck the air out of the cell bay, just to torture them.

  Now it seemed to truly be the end. They had finally finished with them, that this was over.

  He should have fought. He should have let his primal side fly, but he didn't. Instead, it felt like a strange sort of relief for him. A kind of peace he'd not known in a long time.

  The living nightmare was over.

  As they got closer, one of the guards on the door opened the air lock.

  Kolvin tensed, expecting to feel the air sucking him out immediately, but it didn't.

  He narrowed his gaze.

  There was something attached to the air lock. As Kolvin got closer, he could see it. A ship was docked at the air lock. The lock on the ship's side opened, and he could make out an essential military transport.

  Another set of guards appeared. Two men and a female.

  "We have them," one of the mean guards said.

  "I have orders to take possession," the new guard said. He had far more markings on his uniform than the guards who had been walking them to the airlock.

  The group stopped, the three Rhimodians and the cell guards. Kolvin didn't recognize the new set of guards. They didn’t look like anyone he'd seen.

  Correction.

  The female looked familiar, but he wasn't sure why.

  "Surrender the prisoners to us," the lead soldier said.

  "No," came one of the prison guards.

  The lead soldier raised his weapon. "This is not up for debate."

  "This is ridiculous. The Emperor will not tolerate this," the front-most prison guard said.

  "Yet here you are," the female soldier said.

  The guard lunged at her. She jerked to the side, and with a strong hit, she sent him out of the way. The guard came back at her. One of the other soldiers stepped in the way.

  "Enough!" The soldier glared at her.

  "Yes, sir!"

  The male solder turned to the guard. "Are you finished?"

  The guard opened his mouth.

  "The Emperor is dead," another voice overtook the conversation. This one, though, Kolvin knew.

  It was Zapier. The head scientist, or torture creator, on the ship. The one who devised all the ideas for removing and testing the Rhimodian tech.

  Just seeing Zapier made Kolvin's skin crawl. This was some kind of test or way to get the Rhimodians to do something. He knew it had to be. Zapier didn't show up just to visit. The scientist--and Kolvin used that in the loosest of terms--always had a purpose.

  Behind him, he could hear Solkan growling.

  Marcin, who was in front of Kolvin, whispered to a different guard. "What's going on, buddy?"

  "You're all being taken off the ship. Returned to the Rhimodians," the guard said, his voice low.

  "We are under a time restriction. Let us move, then." Zapier waved his hand. "Take possession and return them to the required coordinates. This is the last ship."

 

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