Jamie Craig - Writing on the Edge of Erotic Romance

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Star Flyer

Man of sky crashes into man of earth and the collision is sweet.

Marr, a farmer with his feet rooted firmly in the earth rescues Davan, a downed flyer for the Resistance against the enemy forces which occupy his planet. While the aviator recovers from injuries, their attraction to one another grows.

Can Marr move past his mourning for a lost love? Can restless Davan remain grounded for the love of a special man? Together will they find a way to fight the enemy which threatens their freedom and their lives?

Reviews

Rainbow Reviews, British Bull Dog, 4 stars
It was fascinating to watch the two men, who couldn’t have been more different, Marr very much grounded and settled, Davan, well, flighty, each reach an understanding of the other as their friendship deepens. The story will appeal not just to devotees of the sci-fi genre. The themes of survival in, and ultimate triumph over, a dictatorial regime are universal.

excerpt

Marr caught another glimpse of the chute through the interlacing branches so he knew he was still on course before the forest closed around him and he could no longer see the sky. He followed his instinct, dodging around trunks and stumbling over logs, running blind. When he heard the crash of a heavy object breaking through the dense green foliage, he veered toward it.

He broke through the undergrowth at the edge of a clearing and stopped short. The rebel pilot hung from his chute, caught in the branches as Marr had feared, suspended between sky and earth. His head flopped forward and his arms and legs hung loose. Unconscious or perhaps dead, he didn’t struggle to free himself.

Marr sucked in a deep breath to steady himself. Panic was useless. He must concentrate on moving fast, freeing the pilot and finding out if he was alive. Marr’s head tilted back as he stared overhead and considered how to cut the lines.

The man’s body swayed and the branches gripping the chute cracked and splintered. The pilot dropped closer to the earth. Close enough for Marr to grab hold of him. There was no time to worry about broken bones. The army would know he’d ejected from the damaged aircraft. They’d be tracking him even now. Seizing the man’s booted feet, Marr pulled. More twigs and branches snapped, releasing their burden like reluctant teeth. He reached farther up the man’s body, solid and warm beneath the gray flight suit, wrapped his arms around him and pulled again.

Marr could reach the harness now and release the lines attaching the pilot to the chute. The man slumped into his arms as limp as a sack of cornmeal. Marr eased him to the safety of the ground and laid him flat. He drew the helmet off his head and pressed his fingers to his neck, feeling for a pulse.

The man’s heart beat slow and steady.

Marr sat back on his heels. His heart hammered hard enough to bruise his chest, and his clothes clung to his perspiring body. Exhaling deeply, he gazed at the unconscious pilot.

White blond hair darkened with sweat was matted against his scalp. His skin was pale and his slack lips parted. Beneath his eyelids, his eyes moved restlessly. Perhaps the mag-blast that brought down his aircraft had also rendered him unconscious. He may have other injuries as well, but there was no time to examine him. Marr had to hide the aviator before soldiers came looking for him.

Marr glanced at the deflated chute in the branches above and paused, frozen in indecision. The breeze blew, the birds still called to one another, but the peaceful morning had been blown apart. If he waited here with the injured rebel until the Tandus arrived, maybe even called on his communicator and gave the exact location, he could return to normal life. A few hours of debriefing and he’d be planting his spring crops by afternoon.

The Intergalactic Forces of the Tandus had occupied Theon for almost two years and Marr hadn’t noticed much change in daily life. If anything, things ran smoother. But as an occupied planet, Theon owed allegiance to the rebel forces from across the galaxy which had banded together to stand against the Tandus. Marr couldn’t in good conscience turn this man over. He must hide him. It was what Sasch would’ve done.

Marr couldn’t hide the broken branches that marked the pilot’s landing, but he grasped the dangling lines and pulled, forcing the trees to surrender the escape chute. The chute was only about the size of his bed mattress. It was amazing it had the capacity to support a man’s weight. Even the thought of floating through the air at the mercy of a scrap of fabric made Marr’s stomach lurch. He hated heights and was happy to keep his feet rooted on the ground. When he’d pulled the chute to earth, he rolled the gauzy fabric tight, tied it and tucked the bundle inside his shirt. He attached the chinstrap of the helmet to his belt loop then bent to lift the unconscious pilot.

Slipping his arms between the loamy forest floor and the man’s back and legs, he grunted as he rose from a crouch to his full height. The pilot was a slight man, but a dead weight. His body draped over Marr’s arms and his head lolled back, exposing his throat. At the sight of the vulnerable curve, lust flared, but Marr blinked it away and concentrated on maneuvering through the trees without slamming the man’s head into a trunk. It was hard going. He crashed through the undergrowth like a marauding animal. There was no way to slip silently through the woods and he prayed to the elementals he didn’t quite believe in to let him pass.

By the time he pushed out of the thicket of brambles at the edge, he was sweat-soaked. The helmet bumped against his hip with every step. The man in his arms groaned and his eyelids flickered. Marr glanced down at his sharp, fine features. “Don’t wake up yet. Wait ’til I get you back home.”

He trod heavy-footed across the field, his feet sinking into the dirt. At last he reached the seeder and hefted the pilot’s body onto the seat in the cab. The man’s arm flopped to his side and Marr lifted and placed his hand on his lap.

After closing the door of the cab, he scanned the horizon for any sign of approaching soldiers. The gently rolling land was empty of anything except birds pecking the ground for worms and the neighbor’s dog trotting toward home.

Marr walked around the vast wings of the seeder and climbed into the cab. He started the engine and the machine whirred to life then glided silently across the field. There would be no planting today.

He figured he’d hide the downed airman in the barn although it would be the first place the Tandus soldiers looked if they searched farms in the area. There was a cellar beneath the main floor. Since Marr no longer grew root vegetables like carrots or potatoes, he hadn’t used it for storage in years. He could spread hay over the trap door and perhaps the searching soldiers wouldn’t consider the possibility of a basement in the barn.

Marr studied the face of the unconscious flyer, who groaned and stirred. He looked young—too young to be flying missions. The frown puckering his forehead only emphasized the smoothness of his skin. His translucent hair and complexion suggested he was from Antia.

A wave of concern swelled in Marr supplanting the fear that had hummed through him from the moment he’d sighted the diving jet. He felt the same nurturing instinct that drove him to nurse a lame goat kid to health instead of letting nature usher it into the afterlife. Harboring the pilot meant risking losing the farm, being thrown in prison and perhaps even executed. But he had no choice. He would shelter and heal the injured man, and then help him escape Theon.

****

Davan’s sweet little jet darted and struck at the Tandus aircraft like a sparrow attacking a hawk. He peppered the C180 with a hail of shots, the magnetic blasts invisible, but damaging the larger craft’s body. Not enough to bring it down—yet.

Davan spiraled upward, out of range of the C180’s weapons, and then dove in from the left flank. His throat was dry and his body thrummed with an adrenaline charge. He was one with his ship, roaring through the sky, twisting, side-hopping, dipping and shooting bolt after bolt at the enemy.

He ran out of firepower before the other jet went down, but knew he’d grounded it for a while. Knowing when to cut his losses, Davan shot away, hiding in the cloud cover with his shields up to confuse any tracker on his tail.

Halfway to the rebel base, he’d called in. “This is Airborne 23. Engagement over. Flying home.”

“Are you clear?” Beadle’s brusque voice signaled he was less interested in Davan’s welfare than in the security of the secret base on Theon.

He scanned the horizon with the aid of the viewer. “No enemy aircraft in sight.” The words were scarcely out of his mouth when he felt the hit. A magnetic blast rocked the jet, shattered the air in the cabin and rolled over him in waves. Davan felt as if his organs were liquefying and his head imploding.
“Received a hit!” he shouted into the receiver as he pressed the eject button. Fragmented images of jet, sky and earth kaleidoscoped before his vision before it went black.

Davan jerked awake from the nightmare. No, not a nightmare. His body screamed, telling him he was injured. Every part of him it seemed, but with a special concentration of pain in his leg. He gritted his teeth and sucked in a breath, smelling dust and hay.

How had he gotten out of the jet and where was he now? Was he a prisoner? He didn’t want to let his captors know he was conscious until he’d had a chance to assess the situation so he lay with his eyes closed, listening. Then he heard a familiar voice. It was the dark spirit who’d carried him and said he was taking him home. At the time, Davan had thought he meant to the afterlife, but the voice was real and the hands that touched his leg were physical.

“Sorry. This is going to hurt some. I’m no medic and I’m doing the best I can.”

Davan realized he was nearly naked. He could feel air touching his chest, arms and legs. He peered through the screen of his eyelashes. The silhouette of a man’s head and shoulders blocked the light. His hands were warm and comforting as they moved gently down his leg. Then they grasped his calf and shifted it. Ground glass pierced Davan’s bones and he cried out. His body jerked and eyes flew open.

The man pushed against his chest, pressing him flat. “Lie as still as you can. I’m going to lay it straight and splint it. The bone might be fractured.” He spoke Universal with the soft accent of Theon. “Hold tight.”

Davan clutched the rough sacking upon which he lay. He braced his body and clenched his teeth, groaning as the man took hold of his leg once more and pulled. Agony wracked his body and he cursed in Antian. The residual ringing in his ears from the magnetic blast grew louder, joining with a black cloud that filled his head until there was no room left for consciousness.

When Davan rose into the gray fog of awareness again, a warm palm cupped the back of his neck, raising his head. Something cold and hard touched his lips.
“Try to drink this. It will help ease the pain.” The low, rumbling voice flowed over him like water. He opened his mouth and drank. Cool liquid with a sharp tang bathed his throat and slid down to his stomach.

He opened his eyes and looked at the face hovering over him. The man’s features were blunt and square with a big nose and chin, a strong jaw, prominent cheekbones and a wide mouth. He had the hard, rocky look of a Theonian, as if he’d been hewn from the land itself. But the severity of his face was relieved by the crow’s feet at the corners of his earth-brown eyes that gave a suggestion of humor to his solemn gaze. Davan felt an urge to make him laugh so he could hear what that sounded like.

For a moment, their gazes locked together like two gears, then Davan blinked and swallowed, and man removed the cup from his lips.

“Are you my hero?” Davan said. “I seem to remember being carried like a damsel in distress.”

The wide mouth curved and the lines fanning from his eyes deepened. “Yeah. That was me. For a little guy you’re as heavy as a bag of rocks.”