by Tamsin Ley
Claimed by Noatak
Galactic Pirate Brides Book Three
Tamsin Ley
Author’s Note
Dear Reader,
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This book is part of a science fiction romance series, and although it can be read as a standalone, you might enjoy it more if you start with Book One, Rescued by Qaiyaan. The series contains explicit language, sexual situations, and possible triggers and is intended for audiences 17 years and older.
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If any of that bothers you, beware, because once you start reading, you won't want to stop. If you enjoy laughing, crying, and falling in love, onward to the fun and sexy times!
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Kisses!
Tamsin
A hot alien pirate
A kick-ass heroine
And a rebellion that will change the galaxy forever…
Gruff, pragmatic Noatak is just trying to get from one day to the next without failing his captain and crew. His ionic ability has always given him an edge when it comes to hijacking corporate ships, but his powers are on the verge of collapse, and the ship's doc says even taking a mate will kill him unless they find a cure. To complicate things, a captivating new crew member appears to be just his type.
Marlis has a sixth sense for danger, a keen aim with her pistol... and a dream-crushing brain injury. She planned on becoming a trooper her whole life, but now she’s disqualified. Setting out to find a new career, she takes a job working alongside a huge, bearded alien with gleaming copper skin and bedroom eyes. When the ship's doctor claims he can repair her brain injury, Marlis thinks she may’ve just found her dream job.
But there’s always a catch…
Chapter One
Marlis leveled her Blackstar E-11 and squeezed the trigger. The target at the end of the range flashed three times. Bulls-eye.
“Fuck them and their standards,” she muttered, pushing the target back another meter. She took aim and fired several more shots, each one flashing success. The E-11 zero-recoil pulse pistol had been a gift for her eleventh birthday, and after fourteen years and many other weapons, it was still her favorite. “I was even on time this morning.”
“Good shot, Marlis!” Marlis’s AI chimed from her wristband. The artificial intelligence was supposed to assist Marlis with anger management and lapses in memory, but its trite encouragements did nothing to assuage her today.
“Shut up, Twerp.” Marlis racked the energy coil’s cooling module and set the pistol aside. Picking up her customized Renegade MCS6 rifle, she reset the target for long-range and sighted in.
The lanes of the Syndicorp cruiser’s firing range were all occupied today, but she had eyes only for her target, imagining each bulls-eye as the face of the service recruiter assigned to her file. I’m Legacy, for fuck’s sake. Descended from a long line of trooper personnel with excellent records. And it wasn’t as if she couldn’t keep up during the drills. She could out-shoot, out-run, and out-wrestle every woman as well as most men on the squad. So what if she needed a little help to remember what day it was?
“Marlis!” a man’s voice barked behind her.
Gut tightening, she whipped the rifle around.
Her father’s narrow gaze flicked to the barrel, his mouth in a grim line as she lowered the weapon.
She refused to feel any regret about being battle-ready. Mom had died while she and Marlis had been on Pulati for a mother-daughter vacation. Ten-year-old Marlis had only survived the sudden terrorist outbreak by hiding beneath her mother’s dead body for sixteen hours.
Marlis had no intention of letting her guard down. Ever.
Dad crossed his arms over his chest, covering the service ribbons on the lapel of his uniform. “You missed your date last night.”
“That’s tonight.” Even as she said it, she realized she was probably wrong.
Twerp’s feminine voice rose from her wrist strap. “I informed you of the engagement at seventeen hundred yesterday and again at seventeen twenty. You said you were in no mood to give someone a blow job and directed me not to remind you again.”
Marlis’s face heated to match the rising flush in her father’s usually pallid cheeks. When would she ever remember to put in her earbud? Teeth clenched, she grated out, “Shut up, Twerp.”
Dad squared his shoulders, looking Marlis straight in the eye. “He’s a respectable young man, Marlis. From a good family. You couldn’t ask for a better match.”
“I don’t want a better match. I want to join the Troopers.” She turned around and took aim at the target once more. “Get me a date with someone useful and I’ll go.”
“I can’t rebuild the bridges you burn fast enough.”
Refusing to be distracted, she let out a slow breath and squeezed the trigger in rapid succession. The target lit up on all but the final shot. She lowered the rifle. “I’d be a good soldier, Dad.”
A gentle hand settled on her shoulder. “You blew up at your recruiter.”
Marlis fuzzily remembered her rage at the small-eyed, beak-nosed recruiter who oversaw the drills the troopers used to weed out unworthy candidates. He was supposed to test the recruits’ physical aptitudes. Instead, he’d thrown history questions at them. She seemed to recall a lot of swear words coming out of her mouth instead of answers. “What good is a history lesson going to do for me on the battle field?”
“He thinks you’re a liability. They want to rescind your weapon carry permit.” Dad’s voice lowered with unaccustomed softness. “I’m sorry.”
His words felt like a punch in the gut. Give up her pistol? No way. No longer able to focus on the target, Marlis shoved the E-11 into the holster built into the back hip of her pants and shouldered her rifle, turning to leave.
“Marlis.”
She continued walking.
“Marlis. Your rifle case.”
Face on fire, she halted; she might still have a permit to carry, but exiting the range actually welding a weapon, even on a military ship, was a big no-no. Stupid memory. Other AI models came equipped with a visual node to track items, but Marlis’s therapist claimed that requiring her to remember some things on her own would help her improve.
Squaring her shoulders, she spun on her heel and retrieved the case, visually verifying there was nothing else she was leaving behind. Her father’s watchful gaze made Marlis doubt herself. What else was she forgetting? Dammit!
Reacting to her elevated heart rate, Twerp vibrated against her wrist, encouraging her to remain calm, then came to the rescue with a reminder. “Marlis, you are scheduled for lunch with your sister in forty-three minutes. May I remind you that Attie is routinely early?”
“Thank you, Twerp.” She offered her dad a weak smile. “I need to go clean up. I’ll talk to you later.”
Passing uniformed personnel as she moved through the carrier’s corridors, Marlis silently repeated her mantra from years in therapy, there is no danger. Yet it was a hard mantra to believe when she’d just been told her right to carry a firearm was in jeopardy. She switched to anger does more harm than good. By the time she reached the family housing section and the modest quarters she shared with her dad and sister, Twerp had stopped buzzing.
She stowed her rifle and washed her face, then headed toward the mess hall on the lower deck where Attie probably already waited. Her big sister had been accepted into the Troopers over a year ago, quickly rising to Private First Class. The job left Attie little time to visit with family, although she made a point of having lunch weekly with Marlis. No matter how routine it might be, Marlis’s heart lightened at the thought of seeing her.
Uniform crisp
and ash-blonde hair trimmed to short ringlets, Attie was already seated at their usual table. The huge room echoed with the predominantly human lunch crowd filling long tables, the homogeny interspersed by a few clusters of aliens. Attie’s head was down, eyes scanning the screen of a polycom as Marlis approached. A new gold chevron adorned the epaulet on her shoulder.
“You made corporal?” Marlis asked, unable to drag her gaze from the emblem.
Attie set the polycom aside and rose, brushing her fingertips over the rank badge before rounding the table to give Marlis a hug. “I officially got the promotion today.”
“Hugging’s against regulation. They’re gonna come take that chevron back.” Marlis squeezed her sister, trying to summon a sense of humor instead of jealousy. Her sister was so together.
Attie rolled her eyes and once more took her seat. She glanced toward the long chow line. “You want to go first while I finish these reports?”
Nodding, Marlis got in line among the uniformed personnel. Prior to this moment, she’d always strutted into the mess hall knowing she was among her people; it was only a matter of time before she had her own uniform. Now it felt like everyone’s eyes were on her; challenging her worth.
Putting two plates onto her tray, she selected the chicken curry and skipped the dessert section, opting for two coffees with cream instead. Although Attie never asked, Marlis always came back with food for both of them. It seemed like a waste of precious sister-time to send Attie to stand in line all over again.
Returning to the table, Marlis set both plates down. “It was this or something that looked like cat vomit.”
“Thanks.” Attie picked up her fork and poked at a sliced tomato, edging it away from her chicken. “How’re things with Dad?”
Something about the set of Attie’s shoulders had Marlis on edge. “He’s still trying to set me up with Colonel Yan’s son. Why do you ask?”
Attie shrugged. “Is he cute?”
Now Marlis’s warning bells began to chime. “Some people think so. Why?”
Taking a big bite, Attie chewed slowly before answering. “You turn twenty-six soon. You know what that means.”
Of course she knew. At twenty-six, she’d lose her status as her father’s dependent and all the perks that came with it. Unless she joined the Troopers herself, she’d be sent to ground, forced to join the civilians on one muddy planet or another. Trapped, just like on Pulati. Never, never, never. “Of course I do. What does that have to do with Colonel Yan’s son?”
“A lot of people enjoy marriage. It’d give you a partner.”
“Marrying some douche bag I could beat at arm wrestling won’t solve my problems.”
Attie tapped her fork against her plate nervously. “Marlis, you need someone you can rely on.”
“What do you mean? I have you. And I have Dad when he’s not being a dick.”
Setting her fork down, Attie took a deep breath, gaze locked with Marlis’s. “I’ve been assigned to the flagship Icarus.”
It felt as if someone had just opened the ship’s blast doors, sucking away all the oxygen. Marlis’s vision narrowed, the room fading around her. Attie can’t leave. Her sister was her rock. The one person she could always turn to. Twerp buzzed almost painfully against her skin, telling her to calm down.
Attie leaned forward, speaking slowly. “It’s part of my promotion. A great opportunity for advancement. I’ll be serving on Admiral Olly’s primary staff.”
Marlis gulped. “I don’t see you enough as it is.”
“It’ll be okay.” Attie reached across the table and covered Marlis’s hand with hers. “We can still talk on the vid. And Dad says—” She cut off, biting a corner of her lip as if she’d said too much.
“You told Dad already?” Marlis choked out. She’d always been Attie’s confidante, the first to hear anything. “Before me?”
“He’s worried about you, Marlis. You’re his baby. He even called James.”
Their older brother, James, had left when Marlis was ten, before she’d gone to Pulati with Mom. He was currently a Staff Sergeant on Alleigh. “What does James have to do with me?”
“He’s trying to get you a dependency waiver. It’s easier on planetary bases.”
“You mean live with James?” Marlis shot to her feet, her blood on fire. “You’re kidding me!” People at surrounding tables turned to stare. Twerp vibrated doggedly against her wrist. Still, Marlis couldn’t keep her voice down. “And you agree with him?”
“No.” Attie kept level contact with Marlis’s eyes, exuding confidence. “Sit down, please.”
“There is no danger, Marlis,” Twerp added.
“Shut the fuck up, Twerp.” There was danger. It was all around her, from places she never expected. “Dad says they’re going to take away my weapon carry permit.”
“What? They can’t!” Attie’s calm demeanor broke, and she rose to her feet.
Oddly enough, that made Marlis feel better. “I had an argument with my recruiter.” Heat filled her face, and she lowered herself slowly back to her seat, scrubbing a hand over her forehead. “Do you think they’ll let me petition for another try?”
Attie sighed, looking down at her little sister a moment before shaking her head no. “I won’t lie to you. I’ve heard talk that you’re unstable.”
For the first time she could remember, Marlis felt tears prick her eyes. Actual, honest-to-god tears. She hated it. “What am I going to do?”
Picking up the polycom beside her plate, Attie began tapping in commands. “Since you can’t live on board the carrier after your birthday and you don’t want to live with James,” she set the device on the tabletop and shoved it toward Marlis, “I think you should look for a job.”
Marlis stared at the polycom, her pulse thundering in her ears. A job? As in something other than working for the troopers? Her brain refused to transform the blocks of text on the screen into meaningful information. “What is this?”
“Ads for jobs on Whylon Station. There are other options for you than military service. Legit shipping businesses looking for hired guns. Bodyguards. That kind of thing.”
“Not through the Troopers?” Marlis frowned. “Don’t companies contract through the corp’ for those services?”
Her sister laughed and retrieved the polycom. “There’s a world outside of Syndicorp—whole regions of the galaxy, in fact. Not everyone can afford Troopers. You’re really good with weapons, Sis. And you want to protect people. Let’s find a way for you to do it.” Attie stood. “I have to go or I’ll be late for duty. I forwarded you the info.” She took a few steps away, then looked over her shoulder and winked. “Oh, and don’t tell Dad I suggested this, okay? I’d like to keep my reputation as the good daughter.”
Watching her sister’s retreating back, Marlis repeated her mantra. There is no danger. Yet she couldn’t manage to take a full breath, let alone pull out her own polycom. Work other than with the service?
“Would you like me to assist?” Twerp asked calmly.
Grateful for any help she could get, Marlis nodded. “Yeah. Tell me about these shipping companies.”
Chapter Two
Noatak strode along the Hardship’s corridor toward the cargo hold where Joy, the First Mate of the Kinship, was waiting in the shuttle. They were headed to Whylon Station to meet women who wanted to join their resistance. Resistance. He grimaced as he walked. He still had his doubts about Joy’s documentary attracting the right kind of people, but with both ships’ captains off on a mission, that left him and Joy in charge of the interviews.
As he passed the med bay, Mek stepped out and held up a hand. “Before you go, we need to talk.”
“I don’t have time.” Noatak scowled and shoved the medic’s hand out of the way. It was enough he could feel his ionic powers weakening every day; he didn’t need to be hovered over like a newly-hatched kemeg.
Mek trotted alongside him as he continued walking. “You need to strap into a nav-grav seat for the trip t
o Whylon Station.”
That stopped Noatak cold. He spun on his heel to face the doctor. “No way. Nav-grav is for wimps.”
“Your ionic levels dropped another six percent since my last scan.” Mek pulled the med scanner from his belt and pulled up Noatak’s record. “I ran some models, and it’s only a matter of time before your secondary heart gives out completely.”
“I strap in and Joy will know something’s up. Soon as she knows, everyone will. Last thing I need is the entire universe knowing I’m weak.”
“Let me put this into terms you’ll understand.” Mek lowered the scanner and focused on Noatak. “If you keep using your ionic powers, even for small things, you could die.”
“Could is a lot different than will.” Noatak rolled his shoulders. He’d faced death many times. But he’d always imagined going out in a blaze of glory, not dying from ionic failure like an old man. “Besides, aren’t you looking into some procedure to fix me?”
“I am, but there isn’t a lot of research available on Denaidan physiology, especially with what’s left of our planet under quarantine.” The Termination had not only killed all females of their species, it’d also poisoned their home world beyond repair; no one had set foot on Denaida-daru in over fifteen years. Mek shook his head, lips pressed into a thin line. “Until I can determine a course of action, I recommend no shielding, no sensing enemy heartbeats, and definitely no burn without a nav-grav seat.”
“What the fuck good am I for our cause if I can’t do any of that?” Noatak crossed his arms. “Next, you’ll tell me not to ping the women I’m about to interview.” The applicants were going to join the pirates not only as crew, but potentially as mates; it was vital he select ones who would also be receptive to the nanites.