Blurb:
Orion Hellman is the base commander’s personal assistant, has never spoken a word to anyone, and follows orders exactly, helping to ensure the base runs smoothly by any means the general deems necessary. Classified as a manual laborer with marriage out of the question, Orion has no intention of getting involved with anyone.
A chance meeting ignites Brett’s long dead desire, changes everything he knew and gives Orion everything he never thought he wanted.
Excerpt
Tension
eased in Lieutenant Brett DeMarco’s shoulders as he neared his base, Fort Tottenham.
The lights from the city and surrounding businesses had faded away miles ago.
Unlike his father’s base, Fort Landry, a Strategic Military Command base, the
government required a ten-mile business and city free zone with a limited
number of people allowed to live in all directions from any Tactical Command
base or installation. Farmers were given permission to reside there so long as
their property measured between five and two hundred and fifty acres. In
exchange for inexpensive land and lower taxes, the owners agreed to abide by a
curfew and lights out whenever the order came down from the base.
Light
from the car’s headlights caught movement on the side of the narrow, two-lane
road. Brett tapped the brakes, slowing the vehicle as a trio of deer stared at
him. The way his week was going, hitting a deer would be the perfect way to end
the one vacation he took each year.
His
one full week of leave coincided with the anniversary of General Vanessa
Landry’s accidence to the Presidency and the day celebrated as the date of
rebirth of the country. He’d been spent it with his parents. The visit had
started off with another fight with his father about who Brett should marry. He’d
been reminded that the time to make his choices was coming up and they needed
to be submitted in writing with his signature as approval. Brett had countered
by stating he needed a sponsor but it didn’t have to be a parent. He could ask
his boss or the base commander to sign off if he needed to. His father had
threatened him and Brett had started to walk away until his mother had
interceded.
The
week had ended with his father trying to set him up with younger men he
personally deemed appropriate. Brett did not. He couldn’t shake the feeling
that something was off. After years of yelling at him to marry a woman instead
of a man, his father had conceded too easily. It made him suspicious, even as
his father began suggesting younger men to him. Those his father found
acceptable were all good-looking men with the manners and intellect found in
the children of officers and high-level public administrators. They’d all
seemed stiff and emotionless next to Brett’s memories of Orion Hellman, and
none had the golden-brown eyes and uncommonly long brown hair.
A
figure stumbled out into the middle of the road pulling him from his thoughts.
Brett slammed on his brakes, yanked the wheel and prayed he’d miss the person.
The car skidded to a halt several feet beyond where the man stood. Brett looked
in his rearview mirror and saw him fall. Throwing the car into park, Brett
jumped out and ran over to them.
“Are
you okay?” Brett asked, kneeling. The red from his taillights cast an eerie
glow over the scene. The man wasn’t someone he recognized. While they were
closer to the medical clinic on the base than to other facilities, it was
reserved for military personnel only. The civilian medical center was about
fifteen miles away, close to the center of town. Blood coated the man’s face
and hair, and bruises were starting to form. “I’m going to call for help. I’ll
be right back.” Brett started to stand.
The
man grabbed his arm and pulled, shaking his head.
“You
need help,” Brett replied.
The
man shook his head again.
Brett
stared down at the man. If he did nothing, the man would die. He wasn’t even
sure if the civilian medical center would send a response team this far out.
The military emergency personnel travelled off base only for military personnel
or their dependents. The man’s shirt was bloodied and torn, exposing more of
his battered body.
Brett
squeezed his eyes shut, trying to prevent the familiar images of his deceased
fiancée from pressing forward. The similarities were too close to be
discounted, but left him no closer to knowing who was responsible. “I-I need to
take you to the base.”
The
man tried to push himself up.
“Stop,
you’re going to make everything worse. You don’t want me to take you to the
base, right?”
“No
base,” the man said, his voice soft and cracking.
“I
suppose I can take you to the clinic instead. You’re a civilian?”
“Yes.”
“All
right, let’s get you into the car.” Brett helped the man up, trying not to
dwell on the fact that he was probably breaking another rule or wonder why the
man was so far from the residential areas. But the man needed help, and as a
military officer, he was duty bound to help. More than that, he knew, was
Taren’s influence. No one should suffer as his lover had.
The
ride into the city’s center was quiet. Brett’s passenger refused to answer
questions or talk until Brett tried to turn down the road leading to the
medical center. The man adamantly refused to go to the large clinic, instead
giving Brett directions to a different place, in an area of the city Brett had
never been to. Nerves taut, he made his way through the winding streets until
he came to an area of abandoned and crumbling buildings, most of which looked
as if they might have been warehouses at one point. He stopped at the edge of
an alley.
“Here?”
Brett asked hesitantly, unable to hide his dismay.
The
man nodded. “Thanks for the ride, but you should’ve left me where you found
me.”
Brett
turned and stared at the man, astounded at the first full sentence he’d said.
“You need medical help, I can—”
“You’ve
done enough. I don’t like medical centers.” It was eerily similar to what Orion
had basically “told” him.
“How—”
“End
of the road. Turn left. Two miles turn left again. First working light, turn
right. You can find your way from there.”
Brett
nodded and watched the man pull himself out of the car then disappear into the
shadows. Had he helped an enemy of the state get away? Noise from the other
side of the street caught his attention, reminding him why he didn’t want to
wait around. He carefully followed the other man’s directions until he was
familiar with the area then made his way back to base. Parking in his assigned
spot in front of his building, he turned off the car and grabbed his bags. His
heart was heavy with another secret he couldn’t tell.
Changing Tides available now from Resplendence Publishing
*Changing Tides is the 14th book in the New Realities Collection from Resplendence Publishing. Books are by a variety of authors and world settings.
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