Title:Â Dali
Author: E.M. Hamill
Publisher:Â NineStar Press
Release Date: 8/7/17
Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 85200
Genre: science fiction, space travel, third gender, interspecies sex, kidnapping, genderfluid, space opera

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Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words is happy to host E.M. Hamill here today. Thank you for taking time to sit in our author interview chair. The author also brought an excerpt and giveaway. Â Don’t forget to check both out after the interview!
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~ Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words E.M Hamill Interview ~
- Do you write on a typewriter, computer, dictate or longhand?
Computer. It keeps up between my brain and my fingers better than pen. I used to do data entry and I type really fast.
- How long on average does it take you to write a book?
Six months for the first draft of a full length novel, usually. You can’t rush editing, though. I average about a year before it’s ready to try and publish.
- Do you ever get writerâs block? If so, how do you deal with it?
Oh, gods, yes…just keep plugging away, is all I can do. Even a few words a day is better than none. Eventually it cracks. I may start an entirely new section just to get flowing again. Worst case scenario, walk away from it for a week or so and then come back.
- What are your thoughts on good/bad reviews?
Writing is such a subjective thing. There are books I disliked, which were beautifully written and are someone else’s absolute favorite books. A review is simply the manifestation of personal taste. When someone’s taste coincides with mine and they love the story I’ve told, it’s a warm and wonderful thing. A bad review can really crush my ego, but if it’s constructive, I try to take those things into account.
- What is your favorite motivational phrase?
Be the change you want to see in the world.
- What is your favorite quote?
“We are the music makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams,
Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate streams;â
World-losers and world-forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams:
Yet we are the movers and shakers
Of the world for ever, it seems. – Arthur O’Shaughnessy”
Synopsis
DalĂ Tamareia has everythingâa young family and a promising career as an Ambassador in the Sol Fed Diplomatic Corps. DalĂâs path as a peacemaker seems clear, but when their loved ones are killed in a terrorist attack, grief sends the genderfluid changeling into a spiral of self-destruction.
Fragile Sol Fed balances on the brink of war with a plundering alien race. Their skills with galactic relations are desperately needed to broker a protective alliance, but in mourning, DalĂ no longer cares, seeking oblivion at the bottom of a bottle, in the arms of a faceless lover, or at the end of a knife.
The New Puritan Movement is rising to power within the government, preaching strict genetic counseling and galactic isolation to ensure survival of the endangered human race. Third gender citizens like DalĂ donât fit the mold of this perfect plan, and the NPM will stop at nothing to make their vision become reality. When DalĂ stumbles into a plot threatening changelings like them, a shadow organization called the Penumbra recruits them for a rescue mission full of danger, sex, and intrigue, giving DalĂ purpose again.
Risky liaisons with a sexy, charismatic pirate lord could be DalĂâs undoingâand the only way to prevent another deadly act of domestic terrorism.
Excerpt
DalĂ
E.M. Hamill © 2017
All Rights Reserved
Chapter One
Human beings are assholes. I should know. Iâd become one in the last few months.
Youâd think the near extinction of our entire species after the pandemics and global poisoning our last world war inflicted might let us all pull together. Even with galactic war breathing down our necks, when almost everyone realized the human race constituted less of a threat to each other than some of the other things out there, we continued to be dicks.
Those attitudes started problemsâin particular, Europan attitudes, of the New Puritan variety. I no longer possessed the self-control or sufficient fucks to avoid adding fuel to their fire.
His voice floated over the excited din of the crowd and the pregame show on the holographic screens above the bar.
âAbomination.â
I sighed and turned my head. The Team Europa-jacketed hulk next to me exuded a cloud of loathing against my empathic nets. I raised one eyebrow at him.
âReally? You canât come up with anything more original after fifteen minutes of shit-talking?â The conversation behind me started as a diatribe against the rally for third-gender rights, held outside the arena and glimpsed on the main holo screen. I didnât pay attention to either until the comments got louder and were meant for my ears.
âFaggot.â
âHow very twentieth century of you.â I downed another of the six shots the robotic bartender dispensed in front of me. I wasnât looking for trouble, only anesthetic. Outside, a cluster of media bots interviewing star athletes had driven me into the bar to hide. The presence of mechanized paparazzi still unsettled me. I didnât want them in my face.
The annual Sol Series tournament games between Mars and Europa bordered on legendary for their savagery. No one took rugby as seriously as a gritty Martian colonist or a repressed New Puritan, and the bar overflowed with both, waiting for the stationâs arena to open. Spectators gathered around us in the bar, drawn by the promise of a fight, glittering eyes fixed on us. My empathic senses drowned in their excitement and fear, even with the numbing effects of synthetic alcohol.
He invaded my personal space and leaned closer, face centimeters from mine. His breath carried a trace of mint and steroid vapors. Great. A huffer, his molecules all hyped-up on testosterone. He stood over a head taller than me, about twenty-five kilos heavier. His fists would do damage. His minions stood at either side, more meat than smarts. Neither spoke. Their mouths hung open while he harassed me, and I expected shuttle flies to crawl out at any time.
âYouâre nothing but an A-sex freak.â
âBetter. Still lacks originality.â I threw back the last shot. âHow about androgynous freak? Hermaphrodite? No, those words are probably too big for you.â
The titter of laughter from the crowd only pissed him off. âGo fuck yourself.â
âTechnically, I canât. But I can fuck anybody else in this room. Can you?â
Shocked laughter rose from the circle of spectators. The guy clenched his fists and flexed his muscles. I continued, âDo I scare you?â I swiveled on the stool to face him and changed posture, crossing my legs in demure modesty. My voice rose into a husky, suggestive alto as I leaned one elbow on the bar. âOr do you want to find out whatâs under my kilt?â
I hit a nerve. His eyes went blank, black, and his rage flooded over my senses. The crowd gasped and took a step back. Minion One caught his rising fist and spoke. âJon, donât you know whoâŠâ
Jonâs lip curled. âItâs an atrocity. It should have been killed at birth.â
âI prefer the term changeling.â I stood, and the circle around us got wider. The potent mix of hormones surged through my bloodstream as they altered my chemical makeup and bulked strategic upper body muscles. I let a cold smile form on my lips and dropped into a Zereid martial arts stance. Jon took half a step back as I became more definitively male in ways he recognized. âOh, go ahead and hit me, by all means. A good fight is almost as good as sex.â
âBreak it up.â
The crowd parted into nervous brackets with securityâs arrival. Caniberi lumbered into the midst of the circle with the boneless roll space-born started to get after generations in orbit. He cast a sour eye in my direction.
âDalĂ, why is it always you?â
âJust lucky, I guess.â
The constable growled at me. He turned to Jon. âYou canât play in the tournament if I throw you in the brig for violence. Move out.â
Jon stared at me a minute longer. The threat of not getting to beat the hell out of some hedonistic Martians made him reconsider. He and the minions moved away, but he threw one more sentence in my face like a javelin.
âYouâll be alone, changeling.â
The truth in his words knifed through me all the way to my gut and cut me deeper than any microsteel blade. âIâll be waiting.â
Caniberi squinted at me as the crowd began to disperse. âDalĂ, do I need to talk with the Captain?â
âNo, sir. Leave my father out of this.â Heâd dealt with enough from me already. My mother was now away on the diplomatic mission Iâd been suspiciouslyâbut rightlyâdeemed unfit to assume. Without Mom there to buffer the uncomfortable presence of my grief between us, Dad was lost.
âOne of these days youâre going to push the wrong buttons and end up hurt, or worse. Some things the medical officer canât fix.â His gaze softened. âDrinking and getting the shit beaten out of you wonât bring them back.â
âIâm well aware of that, sir.â My voice came out sharper than I intended. One of the best officers on the station, Caniberi had known me a little over a decade, and he never hesitated to kick my ass if I deserved it, no matter what gender I chose at the moment. This time, he just stared at me with an odd expression. His pity broke in tepid surges against my senses.
âGet out of here. I donât want to arrest you again.â
I turned and left the bar. With the bots still hovering outside, I ducked my head to foil their facial recognition apps and fought my way upstream from the arena.
The shakes hit me in the aftermath of the hormone flood. The synthetic alcohol in my system warred with my normalizing chem levels and sour nausea threatened. I grabbed one of the rails lining the corridor and took several shuddering breaths as my muscles cramped, rearranged, and settled back into the lean, sexless frame where I am most at home.
The crowd jostled around me and headed toward the game. My empathic nets buzzed dully with their anticipation and excitement, but the sense of being watched pushed at the back of my mind. A familiar presence tripped a memory and an emotion.
The watcher knew me.
I turned my head. The Zereid made his way toward me, head and shoulders above everyone else, long, muscular limbs wading with passive grace through a river of human bodies as the crowd shifted for him. An eddy of cautious glances swirled and vanished downstream.
Oily quicksilver eyes without lids narrowed, their shape signifying the equivalent of a smile. His resonant voice buzzed in my ears. âHe is the size of a cargo bot, you know. Even the arts we learned canât change gravity. He might kill you.â
âI wonât let it go that far.â I shrugged. I actually hoped Iâd bitten off more than I could swallow this time.
But the presence of my childhood friend undid me. A lump rose in my throat, pressure in my head, and I closed the distance between us. He gathered me in against cool flesh. I was locked in arms capable of crushing a human like a piece of foil but which held me with careful tenderness. Against his enormous chest, I felt like a small child, even though in developmental terms, Gor and I are the same age. His concern brushed my mind with affectionate familiarity.
âI see you, DalĂ,â he murmured. âI mourn with you.â
I breathed in the scent of Zereid. Gor smelled of his homeworldârain and earth and copper clung to his leathery turquoise skin and short, downy fur even in absentia. Homesickness washed over me.
Iâd lived on Zereid most of my life. My mother, Marina Urquhart, served as ambassador for fifteen years. Dadâs career required he return to Sol Fed, and rather than separate our family, Mom resigned her appointment. My differences were clear, even to my third-gender mother, but there, we were aliens. I wondered what it would be like to have more friends who blinked.
When we got back to our own kind, I found out I was still an alien.
Gor pulled away. In the tarnished silver of his eyes, like antique mirrors, my unkempt reflection stared back at me. His dismay at my mental and physical state, impossible to miss, sighed against my mind.
âHow did you hear?â I said.
âYour mother. â
âOf course.â
His head cocked. âI tried to come sooner, but the travel permissions into the colonies are daunting.â
âNo, I understand.â I wanted to sit and talk with Gor. I eyed the bar, but couldnât go back in there yet. âCome on. We can go to Dadâs quarters. Heâll be on the bridge.â My own cramped space wouldnât accommodate Gorâs height or his bulk.
We squeezed into the private lift and rode up to the command deck. My thumbprint opened the door to the Captainâs suite, and Gor made a sound of wonder as he ducked through the port.
Three levels of transparent alloy shielding overlooked the U-curve of Rosetta Station. Shuttles buzzed in and out of bays like honeybees in the hydroponics domes, ferrying passengers to huge starliners docked on the outer limbs.
âAn inspiring view.â Gor gazed out the window.
Ochre planet-shine from Jupiterâs face illuminated the room, the swirling storms in the gas giantâs atmosphere familiar to me now. I never found them beautiful, only an echo of the chaos in my head. I dropped into one of the chairs facing the viewport.
Gor eased himself into the seat opposite me. âYouâre in crisis, DalĂ.â
I couldnât hide anything from him. Even if I wanted to, he was a telepath; his empathic senses much more attuned than my own modest abilities. Our friendship spanned far too many years, our trust well established. Lying to him would betray our oath of crechemates, a Zereid custom similar to old Earth tradition of blood brothers.
âToday would be the second anniversary of our wedding.â I stared at my hands. I still wore a ring on each of them, the ones Gresh and Rasida gave me.
âI remember. The love between you and your mates deserves celebration.â
Triad marriages with two members of the same sex and one of the opposite were common. The female population had not rebounded as fast as the male. But mine was the first triad marriage to include a changeling spouse under the new laws we helped to bring about. The legislation was both praised and vilified by hundreds of other citizens while we exchanged vows beneath the domes of the lunar capitol. My parents, Greshâs mother, and Gor celebrated with us. Rasidaâs mother refused to attend the wedding of her only daughter.
The three of us had been inseparable, invincible. Without them, I staggered, incomplete.
Our child would have been three months old now.
âDonât say it.â
Gorâs eyes elongated in confusion. âWhat?â
âThat they wouldnât want me to be like this.â
âI did not come here to admonish you for grieving.â
I gave a short laugh. âWhat did you come here to scold me for?â
âFor ceasing to live. Abandoning the larger destiny for which you trained.â
âAmbassador?â I dug a vape out of the pocket of my coat and thumbed the switch, inhaling illegal chemicals deep into my lungs. His gentle reproach against my empathic nets rebuked me without a word.
âYou were sure of your calling as a peacemaker six months ago.â Zereid reverence toward conciliation is, ironically, unforgiving and unbending.
âI was certain of a lot of things then.â I exhaled a cloud of spicy mist. If any of the scent remained, Iâd catch hell later for vaping in Dadâs quarters.
âThere are always those who work against peace, even in their own hearts. As you are doing now.â
âI donât know if I believe in peace anymore.â
âBecause you do not possess it.â
âStop feeding me platitudes, brother.â
He spread six-fingered hands wide. âWhat would you have me do? Tell me. Your pain is mine to share, beloved friend. Allow me to help you. Your rage is fearsome but undirected. You point it at yourself.â
âI was supposed to die, not them.â I cursed the terrorists who missed their target by eight minutes. When I decided not to address the media bots and chose instead to hold a private farewell with my family, I put myself ahead of schedule. I should have died with them. Even though the bastards failed to kill me, they destroyed me.
âCome home.â Gor waited for me to answer. I didnât. He continued. âMadam Ambassador thinks Zereid would be a place of healing for you. You can study at the temple with me again, be teacher and student. This yearâs crop of younglings is a challenge.â His vocal pipes fluted in laughter. âAs we were.â
âThat isnât much of an incentive.â A grin tried to tug at the corners of my mouth, stiff and out of practice with the expression. âIâll think about it.â
âWill you?â His doubt hovered between us.
The port slid open again and my father thundered inâCaptain Paul TamareiaââThe Captainâ to everyone on the station, even me at times. I stood at automatic attention, swaying a little. Gor rose too.
âWhat the hell were you thinking?â he demanded. âAnd turn that goddamned vape off.â
I complied. âA misunderstanding, sir.â
âMisunderstanding, my ass. Six shots of the synthetic piss that passes for whiskey says it wasnât.â He turned to Gor and bowed. âWelcome aboard Rosetta Station, honored friend. Forgive me for not greeting you first.â
âCaptain Tamareia.â Gor bowed back.
âHow long will you be staying? I insist you use my quarters as your own. Stop by the constableâs office and he will register you for my door. Iâm afraid most of the cabins are small, and weâre overcrowded with the tournament.â
âMy thanks, sir. My travel clearance is good for the next two weeks, and then I must return.â Gor nodded at us. âI should collect my belongings now. I will go to your constable on the way back.â
âItâs good to see you, Gor.â
âYou as well, Captain.â He put one enormous hand on my shoulder. âDalĂ, please think about what I said.â
Gor let himself out. Dad and I both understood he made a graceful exit so we could shout at each other in peace. Zereids donât carry a whole lot of baggage. They donât wear clothes.
âDid you need to pick a fight with the number eight of the bloody Europan rugby team?â He tossed his personal data device on the table. âDo you even know who he is?â
âOther than a prick, no.â
âJon Batterson. Does the name ring a bell at all?â
âBatterson.â I blinked through mental processes made sluggish by the vape. âAs in President Batterson?â
âLight dawns. The heir apparent to his self-righteous little robotics empire.â He ran both hands through his hair. I inherited my dark-brown waves from him, but Dadâs customary high-and-tight showed little hint of curl. Mine now fell to my shoulders in a shaggy, tangled mane. âDo you realize the mess I would have had to clean up if you really let loose on him? Even if he is built like the ass end of a freighter, you could put him on the injured list.â
âIt wasnât my intent.â
âFrom what Caniberi told me, you were about to unleash hell on him. You sure stirred up some crap. The president is coming to the game tonight. The constable didnât know who he was either, or he might have thrown you in the brig to prove a point.â He sat down with a thud on the steel bench and sighed. âDalĂ. Come here.â
I sat next to him and braced myself.
âItâs been six months. Your leave from the diplomatic corps is finished, and if you donât return, youâll be dismissed. This has to stop. When you go back to your life, youâre going to encounter people like Batterson on a daily basis. Your reputation and your career are at stake. You canât do this anymore.â
âThat lifeâs over.â
âDonât throw it away. You did so much in so short a time. You have a gift for understanding, and you will be a formidable ambassador. Sol Fed needs you in the negotiation chamber at the Remoliad. Luna is a better place because of your work.â
âBecause of Greshâs work. Because of Sida and our child. They were my reasons for everything. Iâm not sure I feel as strongly for the rest of the human race.â
âThen you need to find another way to deal with their deaths. I wonât watch you destroy your future. You worked too hard for it.â
âTell me how, sir.â My fury rose. âTell me how I can deal with it because Iâm looking for an exit.â
He stiffened. âWhat do you mean?â
âNothing.â I rose and stalked away. He started to call after me, but the communication tones went off.
âCaptain Tamareia, report to the bridge. The presidentâs shuttle is incoming.â
âOn my way. DalĂ!â
I ignored him and ducked through the port.
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Meet the Author
E.M. Hamill is a nurse by day, sci fi and fantasy novelist by night. She lives in eastern Kansas with her family, where they fend off flying monkey attacks and prep for the zombie apocalypse. She also writes young adult material under the name Elisabeth Hamill. Her first novel, SONG MAGICK, won first place for YA fantasy in the 2014 Dante Rossetti Awards for Young Adult Fiction.
Tour Schedule
8/7Â Â Â Â Â MM Good Book Reviews
8/8Â Â Â Â Â Love Bytes reviewsÂ
8/8Â Â Â Â Â Boy Meets Boy Reviews
8/9Â Â Â Â Â Bayou Book Junkie
8/9Â Â Â Â Â Divine Magazine
8/10Â Â Â MillsyLovesBooks
8/10Â Â Â The Novel ApproachÂ
8/11Â Â Â My Fiction Nook
8/11Â Â Â Wicked Faerie’s Tales and Reviews
8/11Â Â Â Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
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