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Wednesday, August 16, 2023

She had to figure this out – #SpaceOpera #AlienMenage #Giveaway #MFRWHooks

Bodies of Light teaser

Greetings! For today’s MFRW Book Hooks blog hop, I’m sharing an exclusive excerpt from my latest release Bodies of Light. This is a science fiction erotic romance with some unusual heroes...

Just for fun, I will give away a copy of the book to one lucky reader who leaves me a comment on this post. Don’t forget to include your email so I can find you if you win (obfuscated is fine).

Blurb

Can you make love to beings without bodies?

Physicist Dr. Christine Monroe has devoted her lonely life to research on hyper-space travel. Her continued failure leads her to sign on to the Archimedes, a sub-light-speed mission aimed at establishing a colony in the Sirius-B system. Waking from suspended animation, she discovers that the ship is wildly off course and the rest of the crew are dead due to equipment failure.

At first she thinks the two virile strangers who show up on the ship are figments of her imagination - erotic hallucinations created by isolation and stress. However, Alyn and Zed are solid, real, and ready to sacrifice their lives for the strong woman they’ve found stranded in deep space. As her ship begins to disintegrate, Christine must choose between the planet she was sent to save and the two aliens she’s come to cherish.

The Hook

The bridge was as silent as the suspension bay. However, a survey of the blinking panels and rotating 3D displays revealed that the entire ship had power. The pods had been some kind of anomaly. Relieved, Christine settled into the pilot’s chair (Sven Harlsson, gone like all the rest) and searched the cluttered controls until she found the viewport activation button. The curved shields slid open, revealing a hemisphere of blackness. For the first time, Christine gazed out into the emptiness of interstellar space.

Terror tightened her throat. She was falling into the immense void before her, drowning in the utter absence of light or form. She closed her eyes, trying to summon the scientist within her. No one had seen this before, the vast reaches of the universe outside Earth’s solar system. She was the first.

She forced herself to peer into the darkness, pressing against the transparent carbon-crystal of the viewport. As her vision adapted, she found she could see faint glowing clouds that must be galaxies and pinpricks of light that were distant stars. The universe was not totally empty, after all. She swallowed her fear and tried to speak.

Request interstellar coordinates.” Her long-unused voice came out as a croak, but Archimedes understood her command.

159 degrees 56 minutes 39.5 seconds galactic latitude, -2 degrees 42 minutes 46.3 seconds galactic longitude,” the ship replied crisply.

Request distance from Sirius cluster.”

Approximately thirty-four-point-seven light years.”

What?” That was farther away than they’d been when they started! “There must be a mistake! Recheck your calculations.”

The ship’s computer hesitated for a fraction of a second—almost as though it were offended, Christine thought. “There is no error. Current position is 34.68643 light years from Sirius, 41.321966 light years from Terra. Current speed is .917 c. Heading is 22 degrees 13 minutes 14 seconds.”

Forty-one light years from Earth! Had they overshot their goal? Of course, a tiny miscalculation in their initial trajectory would be magnified into an increasingly large discrepancy the farther the ship traveled from its starting point. “How long has it been since departure?”

Four years, sixty-two days, four hours and twenty-two minutes,” the ship intoned.

Only four years? “That’s not possible,” Christine objected. Given their maximum velocity, they could not have travelled anywhere near this far. Something was very wrong.

Run full self-diagnostics,” she ordered. “Report any faults.”

The computer was silent for about ten seconds. Christine stared out of the viewport, wondering whether any of the faint, flickering points of brightness might be Sol.

Self-diagnostics completed,” Archimedes announced. “No faults detected.”

Christine leaned back in the padded chair with a weary sigh. Pain pounded in her temples. Her usually nimble mind felt stiff and rusty. She had to figure this out.

 


Buy Links

Kinky Literature https://www.kinkyliterature.com/book/1196-bodies-of-light-an-alien-mnage-/

Amazon UShttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CC9QPKMB

Amazon UKhttps://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CC9QPKMB

Smashwordshttps://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1424481

Barnes and Noblehttps://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/bodies-of-light-lisabet-sarai/1143797134?ean=2940166082862

Kobo - https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/bodies-of-light-an-alien-menage

Apple Books - https://books.apple.com/us/book/x/id6451396778

Add on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/193434594-bodies-of-light

Add on BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/books/bodies-of-light-an-alien-menage-by-lisabet-sarai

Be sure to visit the other authors participating in today's hop. And don't forget to leave a comment if you'd like the chance to read this story for free!



6 comments:

Adriana said...

superb excerpt - leaves us completely hanging. Great visual images of the vastness.

Colleen C. said...

enjoyed the snippet!

Babs Mountjoy said...

You are certainly the mistress of many genres!!! :)

Debby said...

This sounds quite intriguing. Thanks debby236@gmail.com

bn100 said...

nice
bn100candg at hotmail dot com

Lisabet Sarai said...

Congratulations to Babs! You're my winner!

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