Lovers and Lunatics (Mars Adventure Romance Series Book 2)

Home > Urban > Lovers and Lunatics (Mars Adventure Romance Series Book 2) > Page 1
Lovers and Lunatics (Mars Adventure Romance Series Book 2) Page 1

by Jennifer Willis




  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Wait!

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Also by Jennifer Willis

  Lovers and Lunatics

  Mars Adventure Romance Series, volume 2

  Jennifer Willis

  Copyright © 2017 by Jennifer Willis.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Cover artwork design by Steven Novak.

  Author photo by Rachel Hadiashar.

  Published by Jennifer Willis

  Portland, Oregon

  Jennifer-Willis.com

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or deceased), business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away. If you did not purchase this ebook, or it was not purchased for you, please visit your online retailer to purchase your own copy. If you would like to share this ebook with others, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. Thank you for respecting and supporting the hard work of the author.

  Created with Vellum

  For Carrie Fisher.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Wait!

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Also by Jennifer Willis

  1

  Holy hell. Hannah Cuthbertson watched Canada’s most-prized athlete strut his way down the plastic tube corridor toward the Mars Ho Candidate Habitat airlock. It’s like directing celebrities down the Martian red carpet on prime time.

  Which, when Hannah thought about it, was pretty much exactly what she was doing.

  Tyler Park performed like the impeccably groomed trained monkey that Hannah supposed he was. He sauntered purposefully through the human habitrail with precisely the right amount of muscle flexing. His cadence accentuated his subtly oiled musculature and gave his thick hair just enough movement. Then, at the far end of the corridor, he paused expertly to look pensive and serious and significantly heroic. All in his corporate-branded underwear, all executed like a pro.

  “Just once more, and I promise it will be the last time.” Hannah tried to keep the goofy grin off her face as Tyler turned and sauntered back toward her inside the temporary corridor that connected the isolation van with the biodome’s main airlock.

  It was the second season of the infamous and wildly successful Mars Ho, the reality show that let viewers watch the behind-the-scenes process of choosing the next round of colonists to be sent to Mars. The first season had blown the doors off and beat the previous ratings champ—the oddly addictive Tricked Out Tool Shed.

  Now, just six weeks after the first team of colonists blasted off from Earth to put down roots on Mars, another pool of candidates were entering the MHCH to compete for seats aboard Red Wing 2—despite mounting concerns about the program’s competency.

  Hannah was pretty sure that ideal launch windows between Earth and Mars opened up only about every two years, so she wasn’t sure what the rush was on this second team, unless this group would take a longer route. When she’d tried to ask about it in a production meeting, she was promptly shut down by her superiors. Her job wasn’t to mind the science—which she didn’t understand anyway—but to work the cameras and the contestants. So she kept her head down and did what she was told.

  Deep into her overtime shift, she was directing one last candidate through the corridor and into the dome. After that, she had the choice of logging a few hours in the production suite to go over the day’s footage, or grabbing a few hours’ sleep on her cot at The Ranch and leaving the footage review for the morning.

  Or was it morning already? She barely knew day from night anymore since she’d been working for DayLite Syndicate.

  The horizontal seam of her blue isolation suit itched against her shoulder blades, and she tried in vain to readjust the material without breaking the seal. Any breach would void Tyler’s isolation and would scrub him out of the competition.

  The long and lean Tyler Park had already walked the length of the plastic corridor four times, with multiple cameras filming his every muscle-rippling move. The higher-ups had ditched the idea of having the candidates enter the dome in full space suits or even their branded Mars Ho jumpsuits, like the previous round of candidates had done. This time, the colonist hopefuls strutted into their new, competitive home wearing nothing by their logo-laden underwear.

  The underlying wisdom was readily apparent as one candidate after another stripped down to their skivvies. Every one of them was a truly magnificent human specimen.

  The first Mars Ho season featured good-looking candidates with supposedly practical skills and life experience appropriate to building a new colony on another planet—in spite of international grumbling that the reality show format was a recipe for certain failure.

  This new crop of Mars candidates, though, were veritable gods.

  Three Olympic medalists—with three gold, seven silver, and four bronze medals among them. Two super models. A former child actor. One mixed martial arts champion. Two former NFL players—a Baltimore defensive lineman and an honest-to-goodness star quarterback from the Minnesota Vikings, sidelined permanently by too many ACL tears and a broken hip.

  There were two Amazons from the WNBA who’d in the off-season started a portable solar energy business—the WNBA-MBAs, Hannah nicknamed them. A six-foot-five environmentalist who regularly swam the Arctic Sea to raise public awareness about climate change.

  The most controversial candidate was a former porn actress, but even she had a resume any parent would be proud of—she quit the adult entertainment business as soon as she’d made enough money to fund her foundation to find a cure for the disabling Panopla virus that had put her sister in a wheelchair. Now, the actress and her scientists at Panopla Hope were on the short list for the Nobel.

  Every one of the candidates was a college graduate, and fully two-thirds—including the adult film star—had advanced degrees. One of the fashion models had a Ph.D in computer science, and the former child star was a practicing neurosurgeon. More than half had active memberships in Mensa and Triple Nine. And not a single one was over the age of thirty-five.

  Tyler Park fit the mold without breaking a sweat. He stepped toward Hannah with a curious smirk, pivoted gracefully, and prepared to walk down the corridor again.

  As she’d watched the day’s parade of beautiful bodies move from the isolation van and into the biodome, Hannah guessed the new candidates—twelve men and twelve women—averaged maybe 16-percent body fat.

  Not exactly accurate representatives of the people of Earth.

  If Hannah hadn’t had a job to do, she might well have punched a hole in the crinkling plastic tube�
�which looked more like a gerbil run than cutting-edge interplanetary exploration technology—and stormed off into the Arizona desert.

  “Guinea pigs,” Hannah muttered under her breath as Tyler stepped away from her on his fifth go at the biodome entry runway.

  Perfect Tyler turned toward her, the flawless features of his sun-kissed face contorting into a gorgeous frown. “Sorry, what did you say?”

  Hannah shook her head, the hood of her isolation suit clunking along with her movement. “Nothing. You’re doing fine. Just start over and walk toward the airlock, only this time keep going. Go ahead inside.” Her voice sounded artificial through the small mic and speaker attached to her suit.

  His liquid brown eyes crinkled as he flashed her an immaculate white smile. Perfect teeth, perfect hair, perfectly proportioned and toned body. This particular two-time Olympic decathlon medalist was the last Mars Ho candidate Hannah was in charge of shepherding through the process of entering the dome—while he was filmed from every angle. She was exhausted and had seen more than enough camera-ready skin, but she couldn’t quite keep herself from gawking, at least a little bit.

  Tyler gave a tiny nod and turned his back to her. And he did have such a deliciously beautiful back. Hannah wondered how long it might take Mars Ho viewers to tire of seeing the same aesthetically magnificent bodies swaggering past the cameras, but then Celebrity Sweat Shop was still running strong after eight seasons.

  Tyler took a breath—the muscles in his back rippling with the inhalation—then squared his broad shoulders, lifted his chin, and strode forward.

  Hannah’s jaw loosened as he repeated his perfect performance of the previous corridor pass. She might have even uttered something like, “uhhhhh,” before she shut herself up. Tyler reached the airlock door, waited a beat, and then tugged on the lever to open the hatch, the lights catching every muscular movement. Tyler eased himself manfully through the opening and into the biodome that would once again serve as the reality show arena for the Mars Ho competition.

  “Okay, then,” Hannah murmured to herself after the airlock hatch closed behind him. “That’s that. Let the games begin.”

  By the time Hannah headed for the van, the production crew was already retracting the temporary corridor, with clicking thuds of the spinal hoops collapsing together behind her. She pulled off the flexible helmet of her isolation suit and took a deep breath. Everything around her smelled like new plastic.

  “Get me out of here,” she murmured in the direction of the van’s driver, some green intern who looked perpetually confused and sleep-deprived. What was his name? Cooper? Connor? They all looked alike, right down to the befuddled frown on the kid’s face. She knew exactly how he felt. She’d been an intern once, an unpaid gofer on the set of Grade School Divas, catering to every juvenile, self-involved whim of a mischievous and entirely narcissistic pack of movie star daughters as they negotiated the third grade. At least the Mars Ho players were less likely to throw their juice boxes when they got a stain on their overpriced kicks. But she was too tired to muster sympathy for Connor, or Carter. Or maybe his name was Steve?

  “Just drive.” Hannah needed to get back to the monitors at The Ranch and to spy on what the best, brightest, and most beautiful of humanity were getting up to inside the biodome.

  Hannah had dumped her isolation suit in her locker in the hallway outside the main editing room at The Ranch—the onsite Mars Ho production facility the CEO had erected just about a kilometer away from the Mars Ho Candidate Habitat. Rufus Day wanted to be close to his candidates, even though they were already under 24-hour surveillance.

  Hannah wasn’t sure The Ranch was actually close enough—she’d had to sprint across the desert from the production studio to the MHCH during the last competition to keep Mark Lauren and Lori Ridgway from cracking open their pressure suits and breaking their quarantine when they thought they were out of air. She wasn’t looking forward to the possibility of doing something similar with this second round of candidates.

  Mark and Lori were on their way to Mars now. If they hadn’t been named finalists, Hannah was pretty sure her desert sprint would have cost her her job.

  She slammed her locker shut with a satisfying, metallic clang, then stood staring into the dark, open space of the editing studio. Her bay was toward the back, one of seven dark gray desks with its own trio of black monitors and a black keyboard against the black floor, black walls, and black ceiling of scaffolding and suspended LEDs. There weren’t any windows.

  The Ranch was a fully equipped studio, with attached efficiency apartments for employees and a cushy executive office and residence for Rufus Day himself. But while Day’s office featured a wall-to-wall single-pane window overlooking the Arizona desert—so that the CEO might enjoy a comfortable and unobstructed view of the landscape at any time of day or night—it always looked like deepest midnight inside the editing room.

  Hannah leaned against the doorjamb and checked her watch. 6:30 p.m. It was the end of the first day of production, and she was already behind. She’d been on since early that morning and since she’d have to be back at work in another twelve hours anyway, she figured she might as well go ahead and review the latest footage. Try to get ahead, for once.

  The Mars Ho candidates, at least, would get to sleep for a few hours before their first televised ordeal.

  Hannah blew out a long, slow sigh, pushed away from the doorjamb, and turned her back on the editing studio. To get through the night, she was going to need an awful lot of coffee and instant noodles.

  Her eyes were a little bleary as she rounded the corner toward the kitchen, but there was no mistaking the laugh that echoed down the hallway toward her.

  Gary Nelson, Mars Ho’s plastic-perfect host. The Face of Space.

  Hannah’s gait slowed as she felt an unpleasant churn in her stomach. Gary Nelson was the last person she wanted to encounter. She estimated the distance to the bathroom and thought about making a dive for cover until the coast was clear, but Nelson emerged from the kitchen before she could get away. He was chipper and bright-eyed as ever, his glistening, perfectly aligned teeth biting into a frosted doughnut while he winked and chuckled at someone outside of Hannah’s view.

  She was half in, half out of the bathroom when he caught sight of her. He dipped his chin in cheery acknowledgement and chewed his doughnut as he strolled by, probably on his way to the camera studio. Tissues stuck out of his collar to protect his clothing from a heavy shellacking of stage make-up, and Hannah frowned at his costume—a silvery blue jumpsuit that looked like it had been pilfered from the Swizzle Network’s Buck Rogers reboot.

  “You caught me!” Gary held a hand to his chest, feigning a heart attack as he laughed. “You won’t tell, will you?” He winked at her and chomped off a big hunk of doughnut.

  Hannah stared at him blankly. The man was almost blindingly handsome, and it was nearly impossible not to fall under the spell of his smile. He was always affable and friendly, too, but there was an edge to it she couldn’t quite figure out. She had a hard time chumming it up with someone who was so impeccably polished all the time. Every inch of his good looks had been carefully crafted and paid for, and there was no telling what lurked beneath his glossy exterior.

  When Hannah didn’t respond, Gary paused and looked down at his jumpsuit. “Promotions,” he said around a mouthful of chocolate glaze, then titled his head toward the kitchen. “Couple doughnuts left, if you hurry.”

  Hannah remained silent, unmoving.

  “Or are you watching your figure, too?” Gary flashed his million-dollar smile and chuckled again. Hannah’s cheeks flushed. Was he mocking her?

  She cringed at the sudden recall of last night’s sex dream about the Face of Space, then suddenly understood the real reason she wanted to push through the night at her editing desk. She didn’t want to have to confront her dream-world version of that chiseled face and body again, thrilling her with his touch while describing in detail every one of her own inad
equacies.

  He sounded much smarter in her dream than he did on camera, too, which just made her feel stupid in waking life. How could she feel anything—even basic lust—for such a vacuous character? He was one more pretentious poser, an empty shirt who looked pretty for the cameras. The care and feeding of the Face of Space was probably the biggest line item in the Mars Ho budget, and she didn’t know why he bothered to play at being accommodating and sincere.

  And now there was the rumor of that awful recording, of Gary using choice language to describe what he wanted to do to the female contestants and to some of his co-workers, too. Hannah hadn’t heard it herself and she didn’t know anyone who had, but she disliked Gary enough to believe it was real.

  Behind his back, everyone at DayLite hated Gary Nelson. If he knew it, he never let on.

  Hannah smirked, which Gary seemed to accept as a genuine grin. He nodded back and sauntered down the hallway.

  Olivia appeared in the kitchen doorway and held out a cup of fresh coffee. Her sallow face told the story of her own trying day.

  Pulled by the heady aroma, Hannah hurried over and wrapped her weary fingers around the warm mug. “My savior.”

  Olivia tried smoothing out the wrinkles of her rumpled sweater, then gave up and gestured in the direction of Gary’s departure. “You hear they’re launching him?”

  Hannah shook her head and swallowed a gulp of hot coffee. It was black and bitter and woke her up like a slap to the face.

  “Yeah, the Face of Space is actually going to space.” Olivia groaned.

  Hannah laughed. “He’ll be insufferable.”

 

‹ Prev