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Lyn Gala - Desert World Allegiances

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Lyn Gala Desert World Allegiances
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Being condemned to slavery is a common enough occurrence on the desert planet of Livre, but this time, priest Shan Polli is determined to prevent the corrupt, soul-eating system from destroying one more life. Temar Grazer was sentenced for what amounted to a criminal prank-but Shan soon finds that the dangers extend far beyond Temars crime. Caught between guilt and hope, Shan must find his true path in either the priesthood or in a man whose strength and survival defies the odds. Can the two men unravel a plot that threatens the entire world before Temar is broken by a system of slavery that has twisted out of control?

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Copyright Published by Dreamspinner Press 382 NE 191st Street 88329 - photo 1

Copyright Published by Dreamspinner Press 382 NE 191st Street 88329 - photo 2

Copyright

Published by

Dreamspinner Press

382 NE 191st Street #88329

Miami, FL 33179-3899, USA

http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Desert World Allegiances

Copyright 2011 by Lyn Gala

Cover Art by Justin James dare.empire@gmail.com

Cover Design by Mara McKennen

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the written permission of the Publisher, except where permitted by law. To request permission and all other inquiries, contact Dreamspinner Press, 382 NE 191st Street #88329, Miami, FL 33179-3899, USA

http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/

ISBN: 978-1-61372-156-8

Printed in the United States of America

First Edition

September 2011

eBook edition available

eBook ISBN: 978-1-61372-157-5

Thanks

Thank you to Donna, Kelly, Stella,

and everyone else in my beta group

who helped me with both this book

and the logic of this whole universe.

Chapter 1 M AYBE we shouldnt be doing this Temar suggested again If - photo 3

Chapter 1

M AYBE we shouldnt be doing this Temar suggested again If nothing else they - photo 4

M AYBE we shouldnt be doing this, Temar suggested again. If nothing else, they should not be doing this when both moons threw pale light over the fields. Both he and Cyla were fair and blond, and Temar felt like a white flag raised in the middle of a fire-blackened field. The field wasnt black, and the tiny green plants stood out in line against the dry ground, but he still felt exposed.

Maybe George Young shouldnt steal water from us, Cyla answered sharply. She stopped, and Temar flattened himself to the ground and wished that his sister would listen to him, just this once. Hell be sorry when we get proof. The bitterness in Cylas voice made Temars heart ache. Since their fathers death, she had grown harder. It scared him.

We have proof. Sort of. We just need to wait for the council meeting at season-end.

Im not waiting. Not anymore. Cylas voice was fierce, and Temar was caught between wanting to go home and wanting to keep his sister from doing anything unforgivably stupid. Maybe she saw his indecision because she leaned closer, resting her hand on his arm. He will be sorry.

Or well be sorry when were caught, Temar warned. He wished he had the right words to convince her that they were making a mistake.

Then we dont get caught. Cyla looked over her shoulder at him and smiled. He hated it when she got that expression, the one that never failed to get them in trouble. She winked, and then she was dashing across the field. For the length of several breaths, Temar lay on the warm ground, eye level with long rows of tiny plants that swayed gently in the breeze. Their verdant leaves unfurling from stems that were firm with water. Even before their father died, their own farm had turned into a ragged collection of pipe trap weeds and chokeweed. If Cyla was right, and George Young had their water quota, that would explain why his fields produced so much more than their own. If Cyla was wrong. Temar cringed at the thought of working restitution days for Young, on his farm.

Wait, Temar hissed, and then he ran after Cyla. They were close to the Young farmhouse now. Like all farms on Livre, the buildings were tall and narrow, pushed into the rock cliff wall to avoid taking up any more land than required. Most of the planet was a desert, ruled by shifting dunes and sandrats, and every inch of the sheltered valleys was needed to create life.

See anything? Temar asked. He flattened himself on the dusty path, next to Cyla.

Nothing. Her eyes swept the buildings where Young and his workers lived. We find the evidence and then we go to the council.

Or we go to the council, show them my water readings, and ask them to investigate and find real evidence for themselves. Temars stomach started to ache. He was no terraformer or soldier who could live on adrenaline. No, give him a glassblowing shop, or at this point, even a farm free from weeds, with a clear water allotment, and hed happily live his life being remarkably, blissfully boring.

They already refused, and this is not the place for a debate.

No, Naite Polli didnt refuse. He only said we had to wait until season-end, for the regular session. Temar bit his tongue before he started shouting in frustration. Even though they hadnt damaged anything, a landowner could demand at least one labor day from any trespasser, so he really didnt want to get caught. He doubted Cyla had considered that, however. Sometimes she was a little less than logical in how she approached life, and it drove him insane. Maybe if she were younger or just less stubborn it wouldnt have annoyed him so much, but she had these ideas, and then he couldnt get her to see reason. Shed tell him that he was too young to understand that adults had to do whatever it took to get the job done, but since she was only three years older than he was, the argument didnt seem exactly fair. Twenty-one was old enough to know they were both going to be in serious trouble if they were caught on George Youngs land.

It was like her request for a special council meeting. If Cyla had listened to him before she stormed off to talk to Naite Polli, Temar would have told her that she was making a mistake. Naite represented the unskilled workers of Livre, and he was a hard man who had very little patience for bending the rules. Of course Naite refused to hear them during season, but not all the council members were that inflexible.

Temar would have gone to Deeeta Sun. The woman represented the artisans, and Temar had watched her work glass with a skill and patience that he envied, catching the molten sands on the end of her pole and then twirl them into incredible shapes. Deeeta would understand that sometimes circumstances required you to move faster than you expected. After all, with glass, one second too fast or too slow and the entire piece could warp hopelessly out of shape or shatter into a million pieces. Cyla had thought Naite Polli would side with them because he worked the land, but Temar would have sought out Deeeta Sun and explained how one more season without water, without hope, and without credit to hire workers, and their land would be as gone as a piece of glass that shattered when the blower moved it to the punty rod.

Cyla studied him, the light of the blood moon making her hair look pink. We need evidence so significant that they cant wait for season-end. With that, she took off running. The water tanks squatted on tall stilts, the angle of their tilt making them look like giant, white beasts, leaning down to touch the ground. Maybe they were leaning down to eat Cyla. He knew it was a silly childs nightmare, but the tanks still waited to swallow her up as she threw herself to the ground under the closest one. That one was positioned a good six feet lower than the second one, so the valves and meters should be easier to read.

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