The crew of the Scarlet Gaze are figuring out what they want to do now that Lord Straik sa'Rin is no longer running a corsair ship. Some of the a'ani crew want to run a cantina on Risda III.
Kazex just wants Ruthie.
Ruthie just wants to have a nervous breakdown.
Well, she wants Kazex, too. The delicious a'ani chief of security has been a steady, protective, delicious presence ever since she joined the crew. He's made it clear that he loves Ruthie as she is, nervous wreck and all. But Ruthie's afraid of what will happen to their easy friendship if she asks for more. What if kissing his tattoos and touching his sinful body changes things? It's too late for flirting—now it's time for forever. And forever terrifies her.
The only thing more terrifying? Missing her chance with Kazex entirely.
This is a friends-to-lovers between clones (one alien, one human) and starts a new spinoff series that melds the Corsair Brothers series and the Risdaverse stories.
Contains mature themes.
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Ruby Dixon is the secret penname of a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author. As Ruby, she writes about sexy barbarian aliens, grumpy shifters, and domineering bikers.
Rebecca Estrella is a native Midwesterner, voice artist, and voracious literary enthusiast. She has extensive experience in the performing arts, having spent much of the last two decades onstage and in front of a microphone. Her voice work ranges from session singing to radio, with steamy narration being by far her favorite. Her love of her work is evidenced in her rich and melodic narration. When not at work in the studio, she can often be found engrossed in a novel in the comfort of her own home.
Todd McLaren, an Earphones Award–winning narrator, was involved in radio for more than twenty years in cities on both coasts, including Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. He left broadcasting for a full-time career in voice acting, where he has been heard on more than five thousand television and radio commercials, as well as television promos; narrations for documentaries on such networks as A&E, Discovery, and the History Channel; and films, including Who Framed Roger Rabbit?