DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:
Usually ships within 24 hours
Delivery Time and Shipping Rates
Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.
(Mass Market Paperback)
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| Available in eBook | $5.99 |
When a handsome yet stuffy intergalactic cop is forced to enter the Electra Galaxy's Mr. Interstellar Feller competition, and is partnered with an Earth cop as his "manager" and overseer, hilarity and romance ensue.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
July 14, 2008: This is the perfect book to pick up if you are looking for a fun read. Even better, the story is built around strong characters who will keep you interested with their interactions. The twist of a beauty contest with all male contestants and what they have to go through while trying to stop smugglers kept me in giggles. Ms. Sams has come out with another great story and I am looking forward to her next book. If you liked this book take a look a her book Gryphon's Quest by Candace Sams. If you would have liked more heat in the story check out her story New World written under the name of CS Chatterly. I highly recommend all of Candace Sams' books.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
June 25, 2008: If the assignment was anything but illegal intergalactic weapons dealers Earth Protectorate Force Captain Sagan Carter would have pleaded with her superior to find some other agent. However, the earth cop knows how dangerous weapons of mass destruction in the wrong hands can be so she grimaces as she must work with arrogant Oceanun Enforcer Keir Trask to prevent the deal. To enable them to go undercover, Keir enters Mr. Interstellar Feller competition where the exchange is expected to occur.================== Keir assumes he will be paired with an idiot as he stereotypes earth dwellers as being stupid and uncivilized. However, he finds his new partner has beauty and brains as she handles their assignment with finesse except when he stares at her eyes and sees the heat he feels there. However, he also feels guilt as he has hidden from Sagan his other mission.================ Gender bending Sandra Bullock?s version of the Miss America contest and placing it inside a romantic science fiction police procedural thriller, Candace Sams provides readers with an engaging lighthearted frolic. The lead couple is a fun pairing as each comes to the police teaming with major biases about the other?s species. In an interesting galaxy and starring two strong lead characters, the plot is enjoyable and filled with peril but it is not deep tale. Still fans will appreciate this entertaining creative tale while demanding Pluto Pillow Mints.============= Harriet Klausner
When a handsome yet stuffy intergalactic cop is forced to enter the Electra Galaxy's Mr. Interstellar Feller competition, and is partnered with an Earth cop as his "manager" and overseer, hilarity and romance ensue.
Loading...
Captain Sagan Carter crossed her arms over her chest and shook her head. The man whose profile she'd just finished reading would never go for this crazy idea, and that certainty raised concerns about his motives. After watching for another full five minutes, she switched off the recording to take in the real drama unfolding throughout Los Angeles.
The vid screens mounted in every conceivable niche of the office now advertised the Mr. Interstellar Feller Pageant. Everything from mouthwash, male cosmetics, clothing and even prophylactics were being sold as the brand names used by the pageant contestants. Several times she heard a biography about Electra Galaxy. There was a detailed account of how the woman had risen from almost abject poverty to her current status as male pageant diva. Included in all the hype was the fact that Electra owned most of the downtown area of Los Angeles, including the exclusive, ultra chic Stardust Hotel, right in the heart of the city. Since that hotel would house all the contestants, Sagan's interest was in studying blueprints of the place. Detailed knowledge of its layout would stand her, as an undercover operative, in good stead. From those same building plans, she'd learned that the entire top floor, including a huge private ballroom and entertainment suites and offices were all allocated for Electra Galaxy's private use. All but a few of the remaining one thousand rooms and suites were booked.
More publicity on the vid screen followed. In every area of the city, females of all ages, shapes, colors and sizes, waving human or alien appendages, were holding signs welcoming incoming contestants. Banners flew from every lamppost, noting the pageant dates as August 15 through the end of the month. Electronic kiosks located in shopping centers flashed the pageant location as the new Los Angeles Colosseum, built as a domed facsimile of the Roman structure bearing the same name. Camera crews from local news stations littered the Stardust Hotel where the contestants would stay; from Sagan's perspective, they resembled flies hovering around excrement. Men and women bearing hair-styling accoutrements and costume trappings were scurrying from one boutique to another.
She finally turned off the vid screens in disgust. About to voice her misgivings, she turned to the only other person in the room: her supervisor.
Overchief Lement Snarl held up one hand to stave off her dismissal. "I know. I know what you're going to say, and you can keep it to yourself, Sagan. From our side the deal is done."
She let out a long breath and tried to reason with her boss just once more. "Sir, I've read a bio on this man from Oceanus. There's no way that he'd be willing to let us do this to him." She pointed to the now blank video screens behind her. "Those men are not the kind of people he'd ever associate with, let alone compete against. I can't envision any creature with half a brain going for this ... idiocy."
"He'll do it, or he'll turn around and take a very long journey home. Until his planet's Supreme Council backs down on their demands for trade exclusivity, he isn't supposed to set one foot on our turf. Shuttle pi lots, mechanics and workers from Oceanus are welcome as always, but this enforcer is here only at our consul's discretion." He shrugged and wearily swiped a hand across his face. "Dammit, I don't like this any better than you do, but his cooperation in this scheme might just make it easier for his world and ours to come to some agreement as to diplomacy and barter. It would go a long way toward showing some willingness to bend. So far, his leaders have been absolutely implacable about their demands. Yet, here they are practically demanding our cooperation in allowing one of their law enforcement people to follow a lead to Earth and investigate it." He sat down and straightened a scattered pile of paperwork on his desk. "No. If he wants his investigation and his planet demands it-and it seems they do-then this officer from Oceanus is going to have to agree to this cover. Otherwise, he can get back on his ship and let us kiss his alien butt good- bye."
Sagan waved at the empty brown leather chair before her supervisor. "May I?"
Snarl nodded readily and leaned forward to hear whatever she might add.
"Sir," she began. Then, sinking into the ultraluxurious leather seat and straightening her shoulders, she saw that her supervisor's expression was less than malleable. "I have to assume this officer doesn't know what's been planned for him. Is that correct?"
Snarl nodded. "It is."
"May I be so bold as to ask ... who's going to tell him?"
She watched as her overchief placed his elbows on his desktop, clasped his hands together and shot her what she could only describe as a wickedly evil grin.
"You're not serious," she blurted.
"Quite. Since you're the officer chosen for this duty, you'll be the one informing our, uh, law enforcement guest just what his cover story will be." Snarl stopped speaking, opened a file cabinet with his right hand, extracted a folder and plopped it down on the desk. He shoved it at her. "Your cover is set as well. He knows one of us will be meeting him, by what ever means he chooses to land, but that's about all."
Feeling trapped and reluctant to look at the file, Sagan only did so when Snarl poked the folder at her again. It was now sitting precariously on the edge of the desk. Swallowing hard, she picked up what she assumed were her instructions. When she was done reading, she gently placed the papers down and glared at her boss. "Tell me this is a joke of some kind. Please?"
"Sorry. You're now the official manager of 'Mr. Keir Trask.' It's supposed to be some kind of Earth- sounding version of his real name." Snarl tried to pronounce a name several times but couldn't.
Sagan picked up the file, opened it and said, "The man's real name is Keirstrandst T'raskchrdtniq'. Of course, that would be the Earth pronunciation. How they'd say it on his world is pretty damned incoherent. There's a lot of clicking and wheezing that really gets stuffed between the syllables."
"What ever," Snarl muttered. "You'd think these people, who love to brag about their advanced intelligence, would buy a few damned vowels. The hen- scratch representing their language doesn't indicate that we're supposed to have the same, star- roaming ancestors. Christ! Other than their coloring, they could be us. Our physiologies are amazingly the same, but look at this crap that passes for a language and look at how they so conveniently forget our common ancestry to act so frickin' superior. Where the hell did a people so physically similar come up with this dialect?"
Sagan simply sat and waited for this inept, insecure ranting to pass. The Oceanuns' language had nothing to do with the fact that they shared the same internal organs with humans. But her boss had to get his bias out of his system.
Snarl quickly cleared his throat and continued, "At any rate, this captain will be posing as the newest entrant to the Mr. Interstellar Feller competition, and happens to be representing the planet Oceanus. As we see it, the cover is perfect."
"We?" Sagan choked out. Others had agreed?
"Myself and a discreet handful of Earth representatives. In the interests of law enforcement, we've approved this story. That's the only way any Oceanus cop is going to be allowed to set foot on Earth until some kind of diplomatic trade compromise can be arranged. Oceanus can't have things all their way and expect us to bend over backward when they demand it. Besides, the competition is open to any man from anywhere in the known universe, as long as he qualified under his own world's competitive rules. Even the planet Ussar is sending their pageant representative along with their runners-up. There's been publicity about it for weeks. And if a planet of thieving, no- good, conniving cutthroats can send representatives to the pageant, then-"
"Sir, I realize all this is true. This year there are representatives from planets that most folks have never heard of. But I highly doubt Oceanus ever had a male beauty pageant-"
"I can see where you're coming from," Snarl interrupted. "Such an event would be cause for unbelievable scorn and derision in Trask's neck of the galaxy. His people view such pursuits as unworthy. But don't you see? That's why no one from his home planet is going to care that he's representing them. Protesting his appearance as a contestant would be even more undignified as far as the Oceanus hierarchy is concerned." Snarl thought for a moment before continuing. "I'll have my staff leak it to the tabloids that there were no contests held on Trask's planet and that he's decided to represent his people on his own. As I understand it, there are a number of contestants who've done the same thing. Under the existing rules of the competition, this is allowable. His late entry in the competition is a result of his last-minute decision. He can say that his motives are to break with his world's superior bearing and make nice with the lowly Earthlings. I leave it to you to get the details straight when the press questions him, as they most certainly will."
"Yes, sir, that could work. But, with all due respect, Trask would probably be incapable of passing himself off as any one of those conceited asses I watched parading around in the video. It's my guess that he's going to tell us where to get off, even if he was given his orders recently and can't get out of the assignment now."
"If that's the case, you can escort him back to the nearest transport station to catch his ship home. He has no choice."
"Sir, surely we could make an exception and allow him to operate as a law enforcement liaison to Earth. Just this once?"
Snarl shook his head determinedly. "No. If we make an excuse for him to come here hunting one criminal or another, then we'll have to do so for cops from every other half-baked world that hasn't signed diplomatic treaties. We'd have every bounty hunter and armed alien lawman from here to the Crab Nebulae wanting access to our turf, obeying no laws but their own. And possibly putting our citizens in jeopardy." He snorted. "We've already stretched the rules far enough. Though we need his planet's help in fighting off pirates, they need us, too. We're wise enough to realize it; their leaders simply want us to make the greater sacrifices. They think we're as backward as hell and that it's beneath them to be collaborating with primitives," he finished angrily. "In short, they want us to give and give-"
"While they take and take," she finished.
"Precisely." Snarl leaned forward and put one index finger against the top of his brown oak desk. "You're not just acting as this man's manager in a beauty contest, you're serving as an example of the kind of officer and citizen we want the Oceanuns to know. We want Trask to fly his ass back home when this is all over and give a brilliant report on just how in control of our enforcement system we are."
Sagan took a deep breath and let it out slowly. "So, I'm the diplomatic guinea pig, is that it?"
"You're one of our most decorated officers and highly qualified for the assignment on a number of levels. I wouldn't put just anyone on this mission."
"You knew nobody else would do it," she said, and watched him try to suppress a laugh.
"Look at it this way. While you might have to work with this man, who in all likelihood will be a superior, swaggering prick, as all Oceanuns I've ever run across are, you're still in charge. This is our planet, after all. He plays by our rules or he goes home and won't get his man."
Sagan stared at her supervisor for a long moment.
"What?" he curtly asked.
"Maybe we're wrong about him. How do you know this particular Oceanun is a swaggering prick? All you've ever dealt with is their diplomats. Maybe this guy is different."
"I'll tell you how. First, he's an Oceanun. Second, he's an Oceanun," Snarl repeated.
Sagan paused a moment. "Not to sound insubordinate, but why do I get the feeling I'm being hustled?"
Snarl laughed heartily. "You're paranoid. I'm not hiding anything."
She glared at him, picked up the paperwork and scooped it all back into the file. "I'll need to do some more research on Trask."
"Remember: as far as we're concerned, you're away on vacation. Only a handful of people will know what you're really up to. It has to stay that way. If the media gets ahold of our little operation and the special consideration we're giving to Oceanus, all our collective butts will fry-not to mention we'll lose the smugglers and their cargo."
"I understand, Overchief." Sagan got up to leave, then turned at the office door. "This guy is going to be awfully visible as a contestant."
"Since he refused to hide the telltale markings from his planet through the use of temporary cosmetic surgery or makeup, this was the best we could offer," Snarl replied.
Sagan frowned and left her supervisor, paging through the paperwork again. Something wasn't adding up. Why was so much importance being attached to these smugglers? Politics aside, it made no sense. Still, submitting to this farcical cover should boost her career-if she could pull it off. Unfortunately, the mission depended on the cooperation of a man with a reputation for being unyielding. Captain Keir Trask had been charitably described as rigid. To make matters worse, she, a reputed loner who'd come from a background where the only three people she'd ever cared for had lied to her, would be forced to trust a total stranger.
The Oceanun enforcer soon to be known as Keir Trask looked over his information again and handed the electronic programmer back to his second-in-command. As he'd ordered everyone to speak English to keep the language familiar, he did the same. "Everything appears in order, Navigator. Lay in a course for Earth's moon. We won't go any farther in this vessel."
His best friend and lieutenant-Da'nequwit, now to be called Datron-regarded him with interest. "Wouldn't it be easier to just land on Earth, Captain?"
"No. We'll shuttle to their surface. I don't want anyone to see this enforcer ship. There's too much at stake."
Datron turned to make arrangements for the new orders, then addressed Keir again. "Request permission to speak freely."
Keir carefully regarded the bridge staff, motioned for Datron to move closer, then nodded to indicate permission was given.
Datron took a deep breath. "Sir, this mission is asinine. We've already been forced to adopt more easily pronounceable names and speak the Earth language just to accommodate the ignorance of their population. That's insult enough. Now we're being inflicted with this infantile cover. It's degrading. I'd like to say we'll have a good laugh over this stupendous adventure in the future, but it's so far beneath us as to be harmful. Even if we pull off the entire mission without a hitch ..."
Keir shrugged. "It's the best way to find the smugglers. Certainly it'll be much easier than choosing some other Earth occupation as a cover. We'll be right in the thick of things. That should shorten our stay on this backward little rock considerably. That alone is worth the imposition, wouldn't you say?"
"I suppose," Datron said. "But we'll never live it down."
"Think on this," Keir suggested with a smile. "We at least have the satisfaction of knowing it was an Oceanun diplomatic trick that put us in the middle of the assignment. Leading the Earth Protectorate to believe they came up with this entire scheme should be worth a few laughs on the way home."
Datron waved his hand in a conciliatory gesture. "Yes, I'm well aware that Oceanun representatives lured Earth Protectorate envoys into this agreement. But that won't make the acting any easier. Or the revolting stunts in which we'll be forced to engage. Every law enforcer in the Oceanus Protectorate-including those of my home world-will be laughing at our expense. Or they'll find what we've engaged in so distasteful that they'll have nothing to do with us in the future."
Keir turned to look at the video screen, noting the passing planets with only moderate interest. He'd seen so many. "So long as we get those weapon-smuggling vermin, I don't give a Kreskian's green knobbly ass what anyone thinks. When the Earth officer greets me and describes my cover, I'll act the part of the enraged Oceanus enforcer to the hilt. The Earthlings must believe they put one over on us. And that I only learned of my assignment when I was too close to Earth to refuse it. In that way, their agency won't know exactly what we're looking for until it's imperative that we tell them. Earth's Protectorate is too backward to get their hands on that kind of advanced weaponry. I don't care what our comrades think. I will find those responsible for taking those Ache blasters."
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Electra Galaxy's Mr. Interstellar Feller by Candace Sams Copyright © 2008 by Candace Sams. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
loading...
loading...
loading...
Terms of Use, Copyright, and Privacy Policy
© 1997-2009 Barnesandnoble.com llc