Book Review
of Undercover Alliance Sponsored by Bewitching Book Tours
Undercover Alliance
The
Confederacy Treaty Book Three
By Lilly
Cain
Published by:
Carina Press
Blurb:
Sarina is scarred. Her L'inar, the
curving nerve lines that enable Inarrii to experience their full sexuality,
were severed in battle and she can no longer reach completion. Until she
accepts a job as bodyguard to the human ambassador John Bennings, and is
astonished to discover that they share a mental bond—a mirrored pathway of
thoughts that will allow Sarina to climax.
When John's the target of an attack and they are
forced into hiding, he's not sorry to be in close quarters with the compelling
Sarina. They explore their erotic connection, and John is happy to demonstrate
that humans have more sexual skills than Sarina thought.
To prove that she is whole and rejoin her
Inarrii clan, Sarina needs John to bring her to climax in public in accordance
with tradition. With a roomful of Inarrii and humans watching, will John be
willing to perform as Sarina needs—and will their public display make John
vulnerable to another attack?
The
Naked Truth
The
Confederacy Treaty Book Two
Carina
Press
Book
Blurb
Captain Susan Branscombe was the victim of brutal
torture at the hands of terrorists. Though rescued, she’s now facing an equally
brutal accusation: treason.
The only way she can prove her innocence is to allow
Asler Kiis, a Confederacy Examiner, to delve into the depths of her mind. Asler
is Inarri, the alien race that made contact with Earth just months before. His
duty is to find the truth, but when he explores Susan’s mind he can’t resist
drawing her into a more intimate experience.
Susan takes comfort in Asler’s heated sensuality.
Their erotic sensory exploration chases away the darkness and her body aches
for more. But as their desire reaches new limits Susan finds it difficult to
suppress the memories she is desperate to forget.
Is the passion they share enough to let Susan push
aside her fear and trust Asler, not only with her mind and body but with her
ever-opening heart?
Alien Revealed
The Confederacy Treaty Book One
by Lilly Cain
Carina Press
Inarrii agent Alinna Gaerrii was
tasked with observing the Starforce base on Earth. Crash landing her
observation pod onto the base was not part of her mission briefing. Neither was
making m’ittar—mind contact—with Major David Brown, the human who
discovered her amongst the wreckage.
David thinks she’s a psychologist
sent to evaluate his Special Forces team, and Alinna goes along with his
misconception, seizing the opportunity to observe humans up close. But their
daily contact has unexpected side effects, and Alinna soon invades David’s
dreams. Through their intimate mental connection she allows him to express his
forbidden physical desires.
Alinna delights in the sensory
exploration and grows excited by the prospect of a treaty with the humans and a
potential life mate in David. But an attack from an unknown ship sends the base
into chaos, and Alinna may be forced to reveal her lie, erasing all hope of a
successful treaty, and driving David away forever…
About the Author:
Lilly Cain is a wild woman with a deep throaty laugh,
plunging necklines and a great lover of all things sensual - perfume,
chocolate, silk! She never has to worry about finding a date or keeping a man
in line. She keeps her blond hair long and curly, wears beautiful clothes and
loves loud music. Lilly lives her private life in the pages of her books.
Lilly lives in Atlantic Canada, although she spent
eight years in Bermuda, enjoying the heat and the pink sands. She returned
to her homeland so she could see the changing of the seasons once again. When
not writing she paints, swills coffee and vodka (but not together), and fights
her writing pals for chocolate.
When not living up to her pen name, Lilly is a single
mom who loves reading and writing, dabbling in art and loving and caring for
her two daughters. She loves romance and the freedom erotic fantasy provides
her imagination. She loves the chilling moments in her novels as much as the
steaming hot interludes. Her stories are an escape and a release, and she hopes
that they can give you that power, too.
Media Links:
Website – www.lillycain.com
Publisher (books also available on
Amazon etc, and available as an audiobook at Audible.com) www.carinapress.com
Group blog - http://contactinfinitefutures.wordpress.com/
Facebook – www.facebook.ca/LillyCain
Twitter – www.twitter.com/LillyCain
Excerpt
Undercover Alliance by Lilly Cain
“You’ve got company,” Davis’s tense voice
called through the comm unit.
“No shit.” Starforce Special
Agent John Norton glanced down at the hull of the ship. The metal still glowed
red where it had been struck by laser fire only a few feet away from his
position.
John tracked the small
fighter skimming close to the long hull of the Starship Osprey. Its
dark metal body nearly matched the blackness of space. It was coming back for
another shot. Twisting, John fired his hand laser. It sheared through the
vacuum of space and pierced the edge of the attacker’s hull. Dodging return fire,
he leaped for the communication array pod at the far end of the ship and hoped
like hell his aim was good and his magnetic boots would clamp, or he’d be
hurtling into space like garbage. Since no one was going to admit he was even
on board, there was no chance of rescue. His heart pounded, his breath rasping
loudly inside the confines of his polarized helmet. He turned and fired again.
This time the laser hit a crucial spot, and the small craft peeled off from its
attack course.
John released the laser,
allowing it to dangle from his wrist strap, and gripped the ship as his boots
hit and clamped tight to the edge of the array. Leaning into the small amount
of shelter provided by the communication pod, he scanned above him. Only one
sleek, little fighter had gone for him, its design confirming what he’d already
been told. There was more to the terrorist group Terran Purity than a ragtag
group of human racists. The fighter was too sophisticated to be of Earth
origin. The Osprey hadn’t picked it up, or Davis would
have caught that on the online chatter. That meant the attacker had some
serious shielding. The terrorist shouldn’t have detected John either—a single
moving figure on the exterior of the massive human Starship Osprey,
his suit designed to deflect not only the coldness of space but any heat or
ultrasonic detection. At least, that was the plan.
Quickly he flipped open the
closest access panel and toggled the manual relay on the communications pod.
Two more minutes and he would have the fourth and final bug in place. Not that
he could rely on the listening devices any longer. No one in Starforce should
have known he was here, let alone the Purity assholes. Someone could be aware
of the surveillance equipment he was planting as well. Any information he got
from them would be suspect at best. He pulled the bug from his forearm pocket
and pressed it against the console. He felt it dissolve into the circuitry
through the pressure-sensitive fingerpads on his suit and suppressed a shudder.
It never failed to revolt him the way the damn bugs could work their way
through anything electronic, and he vowed again to refuse the microcircuit
brain implants the brass had been pushing on all upper-level agents.
Motion flickered in the
corner of his eye. Instantly he snapped off the magnetic clamps in his boots
and shoved away from the array. Laser fire bit into the hull inches away from
where he’d been locked on. He fired the narrow jets on his back, the silent
explosion of compressed gas propelling him away from the array and back toward
his only exit without a hint of heat to give away his location. The fucking
fighter was back, its maneuverability amazing as it followed him across the
underbelly of the ship.
John grabbed at his dangling
laser and flicked a shot across what he guessed was the view panel of the
pilot. He snapped the magnets back on his boots, slamming into the hull. The
fighter’s momentum pulled the ship past his location, and he shot the laser at
full capacity, directly at what had to be a rear power nodule.
In a flash of light, the back
of the fighter ship ripped forward through its front.
John gasped. An explosion was
not what he’d expected. The resulting shockwave flashed toward him, driving him
back against the hull in a way that made him twist and shout out in sudden
pain. Then the blackness of space claimed the final charred remains of the
attacker.
Panting for breath, John
weighed his options. His knee radiated agony. There wouldn’t be much time
before someone came to investigate the explosion. The Osprey captain
would already be aware of the attack, although hopefully not what had caused
the terrorist ship to detonate. They’d be looking for answers. John
straightened and forced himself to bring up his helmet comp unit and signal for
a map. It flared to life across his visor, the light color of the map
illuminating his screen with a sudden flare of pain behind his eyes. The
explosion had left his head throbbing and his knee feeling as though he’d been
kicked, hard.
“Fuck.”
“I heard that, Norton. Good to
know you’re alive. Now get your ass in here.”
“I’m working on
it, Davis. Keep your pants on.” John’s map pointed the way and a quick
pulse from his jet pushed him toward the closest service hatch.
“Trust me, I wouldn’t go
anywhere near you without my pants.” The deep voice of his mission tech
radiated good humor. The man had a sick sense of what was funny in the middle
of the most dangerous of missions. If it wasn’t for John’s strict rule—no
partners—he might have taken the man out for a few drinks and laughs. But
keeping things professional and separate had saved his ass more than once.
Connections only made things more complicated.
“I keep telling you,
Davis—you’re not my type.”
“Far as I can see, you
haven’t got a type. And you have three minutes before the security team reaches
that hatch. Move your ass.”
John didn’t reply. His knee
throbbed now with every heartbeat. In space he didn’t have to put his weight on
it. Inside the ship it was going to be a bitch to put any speed on and avoid
arrest by the very people he was actually protecting. He had to get back to his
cover assignment. He reached the hatch and yanked it open. Davis would
have already triggered the lock release from wherever the hell he was, via
remote link. Now would come the hard part.
* * *
Soryen Sarina
Tariim slammed a fist into the oral port of her charging attacker. The lean
alien went down in a graceless collapse, only to be replaced by another, and
another. They swarmed her, their stinking, slimy skin repulsive as they tried
to push her to the soggy ground and rip her limb from limb. She grabbed one
creature’s arm and slammed him into the next, kicking a third in its
midsection. Still more of them darted toward her. All they had to do was pull
her breather from her face and she’d be dead in minutes. Around her other
Inarrii fought hand to hand against the Archat swarm. Lasers were useless and
actually dangerous to fire in the methane-rich atmosphere of this world.
She’d lost her first set
of dash’tet knives and now reached for her second, grabbing
for the hilts strapped to her calves. The movement cost her; two more Archat
were on her in seconds but she rolled with their attack, using their momentum
to skewer them through on her long dash’tet.
A long hooting howl sounded
as she pulled her knives from their bodies. The unprovoked attack on the
Inarrii scout party was now a retreat. Inarrii all around her raised their
voices in a ragged cheer, and she laughed aloud.
Too soon, the feeling of
exhilaration melted away. Her grin faded. This was useless. There was no real
victory. She didn’t know the Inarrii warrior who had battled only a few feet
away. He wasn’t her teammate and this wasn’t real. With a decisive slash of
her dash’tet, still dripping with alien gore, she shut down the
battle simulator and stepped out of the holo unit. Her battle gear faded as she
exited, but the bruising she’d received inside the simulation remained
painfully real.
Fighting these images, these
pale reflections of old battles, provided only a few moments of relief from the
truth. She’d been there, on the very mission this simulation had been based on.
She’d fought on dozens of worlds, performed hundreds of dangerous missions. But
it would never be the same. She rubbed the upper muscle of her left arm, felt
the damage no Inarrii medtech would ever be able to remove.
Beneath the fading scar
tissue was the real injury. Her L’inar were severed, the
damage far deeper than surface lacerations. Despite a dozen reconstructive
surgeries, her synapses no longer meshed. She would never again have complete
release, experience the utter sexual abandon the sensitive L’inar nerve
lines could inspire. And without that completion, her mind was at risk. At
least, according to Inarrii belief.
Her therapist said she would
recover. Her commander agreed. Her clan was sympathetic, but already garnering
the political credit and honor points from a permanent disability of one of
their own in the line of duty. Her current assignment indicated her clan was
more in touch with reality than either of her advisors.
Sarina exited the simulation
lounge of the Inarrii flagship Horneu. This would be her last evening on board
before she headed to her new assignment and complete boredom. There would be no
more laser fights in her future, no space battles. With a groan, she walked to
the next section of the training level. The familiar and usually comforting
scent of sweat in the strength focus room did nothing to cool the anger that
burned inside her over her predicament. She could fly a ship, strategize and
fight with the best, excel at everything a warrior could hope for, but she
would never get the chance to prove it again. Just because her damn L’inar and
her lack of a sex life were a supposed threat to her sanity.
“Fuck.” She tested the human
curse and found it vaguely satisfying, and in her situation the curse was
ironically apt. She moved over to the resistance boards and attached the wrist
and ankle straps. Throwing her weight and her anger into the workout, she
pushed herself to the limit.
The boards hummed with power
as she strained to touch them, to press them past her usual level. Sweat beaded
on her back, slowly slipping down the length of her spine. Her L’inar reacted
to the slight touch of the drops of liquid. Sensation fizzled along the nerves,
flared around the curve of her ribs, bounced erratically around her abdomen to
flicker over the lower curve of her breasts, only to dissipate. She jerked in
her restraints, the sensation an erotic tease, a reminder of the fact that she
hadn’t had sex in a month and wasn’t likely to experience it any time soon.
She ripped the bands from her
wrists and glanced around the room, thankful the area remained nearly empty.
Perhaps they were right. Even if she managed to reach orgasm again, these
unpredictably odd flashes of L’inar activity just might drive her
insane. At least no one had witnessed her strange reaction. One set of warriors
trained in hand-to-hand combat in the far corner of the training level. Their
strikes and parries nearly blurred in rapid progression. They were in sync with
each other, even their breaths matching rhythms. Sarina pulled off her ankle
straps, never taking her eyes off the sparring couple. They had to be a couple.
If they weren’t, they soon would be. The flashing blows were slowing, becoming
more of a dance than an attack. Before the night was out, they would be wrapped
in a dance of a different kind. Skin on sweaty skin.
Sarina sagged against the
resistance boards. Their power had disengaged the moment she pulled off the
tethers. Inert now, they bowed slightly with her weight. Perhaps leaving the
Horneu wouldn’t be such a bad thing. Despite the incredible boredom of guarding
a human nobody, at least on the human ships there was no open sex. No erotic
displays, no direct offers that held the intimacy of m’ittar mind
contact and a promise that couldn’t be fulfilled—complete L’inar arousal
and release.
She turned away from the
couple and walked quietly from the room to the sonic cleansers. The hum of the
cleansing units passed their vibration up through the soles of her feet and
into her body. An ache low in her belly reminded her again, as if she needed
any more reminders, that it had been weeks since she’d shared the
tension-relieving experience of sex. Without sex, Inarrii could not de-stress.
That was the reason she was being assigned to bodyguard such a
low-status human. What would they have done with her if she hadn’t already
learned standard English? No de-stressing meant an eventual breakdown, but how
much stress could she experience guarding John Bennings, a lawyer who spent his
days deep in the tangled webs of information completing the final layer of the
human/Confederation Treaty?
It was a horrifyingly dull
thought.
Still, a job was a job. And
as long as she could, she’d retain the rank of warrior, a Soryen,
giving every assignment everything she had. Anyone who said she couldn’t
could…fuck themselves. She snickered at her own sick sense of humor and then
leaned into the sonic cleanser.
Book Review:
This is
the third Inarrii book I have read. They are hot.
The other two books had male Inarrii and female humans. This story has a male human and a female
Inarrii. This woman has been
injured. The Inarrii have ridges that
increase their sexual pleasure. They
actually use sex to release pressure.
She has been unable to have an orgasm since her
injury which has resulted in her being unable to maintain her position in
society. However, with John, the human,
she is able to reach release. This is
not something she expected, but she has hope that she will be able to return to
her former position in society.
This book is so hot; it reaches a scale of 8 on
the chili pepper scale. I give this book
a rating of 5 out of 5 clouds.
This product or book
may have been distributed for review; this in no way affects my opinions or
reviews.
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