T.S. Valmond https://tsvalmond.com writing epic space operas with heart and soul Tue, 09 Sep 2025 14:58:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://tsvalmond.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Original-size-LOGOS-1-50x50.png T.S. Valmond https://tsvalmond.com 32 32 Secure Your Bundle Before It Vanishes Into the Void https://tsvalmond.com/secure-your-bundle-before-it-vanishes-into-the-void/ Tue, 09 Sep 2025 13:51:58 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=3922

The static clears. A warm voice, conspiratorial and just a little mischievous, slips through the comms net.

“Friends among the stars, the signal has come again. The StoryBundle beacon is live.”

The holographic console flickers, pulling up the coordinates: 110403

11 coded volumes. 4 trilogies. 3 exclusives sealed by encryption. 

The data sparkles in the air, each title glowing like a star chart waiting to be navigated.

“There’s action. Worlds dripping in color and danger. Heroines who don’t just survive, but bend galaxies to their will. This mission is yours if you choose to accept it.”

A pause. 

These are your instructions:

  • 5 credits to unlock the starter sequence—three volumes, enough to test your ship’s engines.
  • 25 credits opens the entire galaxy: all eleven volumes, trilogies intact, exclusives decrypted.

The voice softened, almost conspiratorial.

“You decide what you pay. But hear me. This wormhole is collapsing in on itself l ike a dying star. When the window closes, the signal is gone. There will be no second broadcast.”

The console blinks. 

END OF TRANSMISSION

In the quiet hum of your ship, a choice hangs in the air.

Will you crack open the seal to another galaxy—or let the void swallow the coordinates forever?

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Arrival ~Sneak Peek https://tsvalmond.com/arrival-sneak-peek/ Wed, 27 Sep 2023 14:00:00 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=3334

I hope by now I don’t have to tell you that there could be spoilers in this preview. If you haven’t read the other four books what in the world are you waiting for? Go check them out over at the Starship Hope series home page.

Now on to the good stuff…

~Preview~

People ran in every direction like cockroaches on fire. Asteroid fragments fell from the sky every day, taking with it their world one piece at a time. They dodged a guard by ducking behind a storage container.

“We won’t make it.” Robby’s eyes shifted from left to right in time with his panic. He’d had the same look the first time he’d gotten caught with his hand in mom’s cookie jar.

Robby was named for his father. Their mother had named both of her sons for their fathers, just to be sure they could track them down should they choose to find them. Unlike himself, the only physical trait his little brother Robby shared with his father were the gray eyes.

The older boy gave his brother a stern look, willing him forward. “We’ll make it. Now shut up and run.”

The two of them bolted through the panicked throng, racing for the hangar. They dodged weapons fire from the guards defending the last ship leaving the planet. With one day left and only one functioning ship on the ground, things were beyond catastrophic.

The countdown to the planet’s inevitable destruction played on every visible display. They’d named their destroyer Harvey, like something out of a Blue Earth movie. Harvey was coming, whether they liked it or not, and it would crush whatever was left of Zelenia.

Government and military personnel had reserved the Intent for themselves on a base on the outskirts of the Western continent. They believed hiding the truth from everyone somehow gave them a free ticket off the planet. The Coalition had other plans, and so did he. As soon as he heard of their plans to take the last ship, he knew it would be Robby and his last chance to survive.

The Starship Hope had left the rest of the world to burn, carrying with it the future of their planet. Days later, reporters discovered a second and third ship preparing to launch. The Aspire left the planet a week ago and had immediately lost contact. The third, they named the Reliant never made it off the ground because of some technical problem. That left the Intent, the fourth and final lifeboat.

As the most sought-after target, they’d focused their attention on the Intent. The collapse of all worldwide systems of government and law enforcement made it impossible for security to be everywhere at once, but dragging his brother from behind one storage container to the next was taking its toll. The Coalition’s leak of the location of the last remaining ship gave people like him, who paid attention, a fighting chance.

But that meant getting past the desperate crowd, the guards, the security protocols, and getting on the ship itself without detection. Reaching the ship dressed in maintenance clothing had been their best option. So far, the guards had waved them forward toward the ship, but in the chaos, there was the risk that they could still take on stray fire.

The guards had their backs to the only other way onto the ship. Studying the specs of every ship and reviewing their designs would save them.

Robby remained glued to his older brother’s back as they ran until they reached the last container before their final mad dash to the ship’s waste system. It would be clean, but only until they took off. Once they launched, the ship would purge the system and anyone caught inside would suffocate and die in the waste.

After two attempts, the hatch released, and he climbed halfway in before he turned back to wave his younger brother forward.

Robby shook his head, then scanned the moving crowd again.

“Come on.” He mouthed the words and gestured to his brother with one hand.

Robby hesitated a beat, then rose and ran forward. He was still moving forward when the shot hit him in the back. His body fell in slow motion, but his eyes stared straight ahead toward his older brother.

His older brother’s scream died in the air. It took him several moments to stop shaking from rage. He still hadn’t gotten onboard the ship.

“You there!” a guard shouted. The voice came from behind him. It took him less than a second to determine this was the one who’d shot his brother.

“You shot him…” The words trickled out of his mouth like the blood on his brother’s lips.

“This crowd is out of control. He got in the way.”

It hadn’t been because they’d discovered, it was because he’d gotten between the guard and someone else.

“Where are you supposed to be?” the guard demanded.

“We were supposed to be working on the waste outtake system.”

“Well, get to it. You don’t want to get caught up in this mess. Besides, I’m pretty sure this ship is taking off early. We can’t cover you any longer.”

He took one last look at his little brother, then started to climb.

The waste shaft wasn’t clear, as he’d been expecting. It was already in use. He slid around in the muck, hoisting himself up in places using the tips of his fingers and the toes of his boots. After several tries, he willed himself forward. Every hatch he passed led to rooms where he overheard crew talking or maintenance checks being performed.

Once they initiated the launch, things only got worse. The smell of off-gas made him choke as he crawled to the next hatch.

Locked.

Gagging on the smell, he scrambled to the next opening. He didn’t care anymore if he crawled out of the system on the floor of the bridge. He had to get out or else he’d die.

Fortunately, the hatch gave under his hands, and he crawled out coughing and gasping for air. He rolled onto his back, sucking in fresh air, and for the first time noticed where he’d ended up. He lay face-up on the floor of an empty storage hanger, staring at the exposed beams on the ceiling and the large crates all around him.

From his position on the floor, he felt the shift of the craft as it lifted off the ground. Alone with his grief at last, his thoughts went to Robby. His brother should have been panting on the floor beside him. He’d lost so much already, too much. This was supposed to be their last chance to set things right.

 He’d lost track of how long he laid there. The minutes became hours, and in his exhaustion, he’d grown too weak to care. Instead, he dreamed of his younger days with his mother and brother back home. He could almost feel the sun beating down on his bare back.

He turned toward it and its rays blinded him. Then the bright sunlight turned artificial, and he lifted his hand to block the flashlight beam shining in his face.

The young man holding a blaster and the light on him wasn’t wearing a uniform. He couldn’t be much older than his younger brother. The realization of it set his teeth on edge. This young man stood with a confidence his brother hadn’t gotten to live long enough to attain.

“Who are you?” the young man demanded.

Just because he had the confidence didn’t mean he’d earned it, though.

“You’re not crew,” he replied, his voice scratchy from mourning his brother.

The man’s blaster lowered to his side, and he commanded others to do the same.

“No, neither are you.” He didn’t wait for confirmation as he continued, “This ship belongs to the Coalition now. You can choose to join us, or get thrown out the airlock with the other resisters.”

“You’re with the CAH?”

“You haven’t answered my question. Who are you?”

He could be CAH if that meant his survival. He’d do what he and his brother would have done together. Captain Dana Pinet would pay for her father’s mistakes.

“I’m Coalition, too. The name’s Tank.”

***To Be Continued***

Pick up your copy of Starship Hope Arrival and finish it today!

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The Expanded Universe Vol. 9 https://tsvalmond.com/the-expanded-universe-vol-9/ Tue, 12 Sep 2023 04:09:59 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=3317

Available on Amazon for a limited time only. 

Get your copy of The Expanding Universe Volume 9 today!

Status Three Agent

~A Short Story Excerpt~

“Stop, in the name of the IC!”

Status Three Agent Clay Taylor-Davis shouted the warning as he snaked through the overcrowded streets of Central City. His optical upgrades created a path through the shoppers who blocked his pursuit. Didn’t they have anywhere else to be in the middle of the day?

The four-armed Deltazoid, with a frame like a tank, sprinted through the crowd ahead of him with surprising agility. His broad shoulders knocked several individuals into Clay’s path. The tactic kept him from executing a clean shot before the Deltazoid scrambled down the stairs of the nearest mag-train station. Clay’s enhanced legs vaulted him over the stairs to the platform. Mid-air, the helmet of his uniform auto answered his captain’s call just as he dropped into a perfect landing.

“This isn’t your jurisdiction, Agent!”

“Sir, I’ve got him,” Clay said as he dashed out onto the station’s platform. He aimed his multi-shot taser and fired. The Deltazoid dropped to the ground on his face with a thud. The commotion scattered nearby passengers, clearing the deck.

Clay slapped two sets of mag-cuffs over the crim’s wrists. It would take two people to lift him, so he’d have to wait for backup.

“Wake up,” the crim mumbled between numb lips. “Find the Brotherhood.”

His words didn’t make any sense. “Relax,” Clay said. The stunner must have scrambled his brains.

“No!” The Deltazoid’s eyes cleared. His large pupils focused on Clay. “They’re lying to you, Clay. You’ll forget.”

“Do I know you?”

The sound of IC sirens grew closer as backup arrived. 

“Yes, but there’s no time. In my pocket, quick!”

Clay dug into the indicated pocket and pulled out a thumbnail sized memory chip. He palmed it when six agents in all-white uniforms stepped between him and the Deltazoid.

Alphas.

In the academy, they’d been at the head of their class. In the field, they were legendary. Clay, like every other cadet, had revered them. He never dreamed he’d see them up close.

They injected something into the crim’s thick neck, rendering him unconscious, then hauled him off. Before Clay could protest, a hand gripped his shoulder. The man bore his rank over the left breast of his gray uniform.

Clay placed a fist over his chest in salute. “Major Croft Adams.” 

“Good work, Status Three. We’ll take it from here.” The major’s expression remained unreadable behind the helmet.

“Yes, sir,” Clay said, choking on the words, grateful he could hide behind his own helmet.

A Status Three with tenacity wasn’t enough. If he wanted on a ship, or space station posting off Red Moon, he’d need more arrests.

His backup arrived, out of breath. “The Alphas get all the credit. Why do we bother? Right, brother?”

Clay didn’t feel a kinship with other Status Threes. He was a Status Three for one reason: He was horrible at following the rules. 

Instead of responding, he stalked back toward his transport. Clay glanced down at the memory chip in his palm once more before slipping it into his jacket pocket. 

Whatever was on the chip would probably get him demoted or fired, so why had he risked taking it?

-to be continued-

Read the rest of mine along with 16 other fantastic short SF stories today!

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The Next Nexus https://tsvalmond.com/the-next-nexus/ Wed, 29 Dec 2021 00:24:22 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=2591 Space Beetles,

Virtual Realities,

and Aliens, oh my!

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A Viral Worth Waiting For – Starship Hope Book 3 https://tsvalmond.com/a-viral-worth-waiting-for-starship-hope-book-3/ Fri, 02 Apr 2021 12:30:00 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=2406

This series is heating up and if you like alien viruses that bring people together rather than keep them separated then you’re going to love this one. After a year of being socially distanced this book has everything I needed. It’s my dearest wish that you enjoy this escape into my fictional universe.

I spent a lot of time making friends online instead of in-person while trying to get this series together. I’m not complaining, it could have been a lot worse but when I say I MISS PEOPLE. I’m not kidding. I dream about malls, concerts, and theaters.

Once you’re vaccinated where’s the first place you’re going to go?

Enjoy this book and please hit me up with your thoughts or leave a review on the platform you like best.

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Starship Hope: Viral ~Sneak Peek~ https://tsvalmond.com/starship-hope-viral-sneak-peek/ Fri, 19 Mar 2021 14:30:00 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=2395 Tired of endless space? Get ready for Viral the third book in the Starship Hope Series. If you like a virus that does anything but social distance then you’re going to love this story.

ABOUT THE BOOK

The virus won’t kill them but the honesty might

Captain Dana Pinet and the crew of the Starship Hope have tracked down the thieving pirates who stole their embryos. A chance at finding a new planet for their people to settle is finally within their grasp. But when an alien truth-agent infects everyone on board, their survival will fall into the hands of an android, an escaped criminal, and a girl with uncanny abilities. 

Everyone’s emotions are running as high as their temperatures when keeping a secret becomes impossible. The android may have an antidote, but with time quickly running out, the ship may be destroyed before he can distribute it. 

If you like close encounters of the dangerous kind, then you’ll love Viral, the third book in the space opera adventure series Starship Hope. 

Get your copy of Viral on Amazon today!


Captain’s Personal Log: 4327.10.5

Those stinking, lying Begarans. They have our embryos, and I want them back. 

They pointed us toward the Fashin Teku ship that stole from us, but only some of our cargo, and three of the Teku survived after the truth serum the Begarans gave them. Dr. Jabar cleared them for duty, helping refit the ship as we race back to the Begaran home-world. The crew’s been working tirelessly. They were on twenty-four-hour shift rotations to make repairs after the explosion of the Des freighter knocked out propulsion, thermal regulators, life-support, and damaged the hull on decks eleven and twelve. 

It’s been two days, and the crew is dragging. Most days, everyone’s work requires scrutiny, including mine. I know that, but we’re moving again, at last. Without the Teku, it would have taken us over a week to get to the Begarans. At least with their help, we can cut that time in half. I don’t trust them anymore than I could pick one up and throw them, but at this point, my people don’t have a choice. 

This morning I woke up in a pool of sweat. Not because of them, but because of Peter Barnes. I’d been running away from him again in my dream. Sometimes he’s coming after me, other times it’s like it was on Zelenia, where everyone gathered together behind him to accuse me. Between the nightmares and the repairs, the sleepless nights are showing under my eyes and in the headaches, though there’s not much I can do about it. The ship has continued off-kilter since his escape, and worst of all, he knows my secret. It’s not what he knows, but what he’ll try to do with it that keeps me awake. 

Rido’s healing treatments have been helping, but to be honest, I find myself struggling with how I feel about him. He’s a great guy, with wonderful bedside manner, but beyond the basic attraction, I’m not sure I can go deep with someone like him. We don’t have the same beliefs or ideals, and though I’m fascinated by him, there’s something missing. It’s not easy like it was with Wade. I know I shouldn’t compare, but I can’t help it. Wade makes me think and laugh without even trying. Of course, he’s going to marry Maggie any minute, and I need to come to terms with it. I had my chance with him, and I blew it. I’ll put on a smile for the event, even if it kills me.

Today I’m going to take a nanodot. 

Dana reached into her side table and pulled out the tin of nanodots. There were only five left, a reminder that Barnes had already taken three. Her hand trembled, the small tin rattling. She put it down on the table and stared inside. Each white anti-anxiety dot was nothing more than a means of control. For the Zelenian Space Fleet, it was against regulation for any Captain to be using them, let alone being dependent on them, as she’d been. A captain dependent on anything artificially manufactured was in trouble. 

She’d saved them after her psych treatments. After Kristoff’s explosive betrayal, a former friend and member of the Coalition Against the Hierarchy, she’d been a wreck. It had taken her months to come to terms with losing those who’d gathered to throw her surprise party at the Breezy Blue. After, Dana had kept the remaining nanodots hidden in a treasure box her father had made her as a little girl, regulating them for emergencies only. Before the incident, she’d worn an unreadable mask when she was anxious. Now, there were times she couldn’t disguise the anxiety. Dana reasoned it was just taking her longer than expected to get back to her old self. 

No one needed to know about the dots. She wasn’t out of control or anything. She just wasn’t ready to lose the comfort knowing they were there gave her. 

But now Barnes knew about them. 

The question wasn’t if Barnes would say anything, it was when. The longer he went free, the greater the anxiety grew within her, disrupting her dreams. He’d taken three of the nanodots as if to taunt her. He knew she couldn’t go to the doctor and request more. Did he think he could use them to barter for his life? Would he threaten to expose her lie in order to get what he wanted? 

Dana scoffed at the idea. She could quit whenever she wanted, she just needed a little more time. She wasn’t going to let Barnes back her into a corner. Should the truth about her anxiety get out she’d deal with it, but for now, she’d have to wait for him to make his move.

She popped the white nanodot to the back of her throat and took a sip of water, swallowing both down.

CHAPTER 2

Even with the anti-anxiety drug coursing through her, Dana sat on the bridge, tapping her fingers on the arm of her chair. After four hours they still weren’t going fast enough. She waited for the latest report on their engines with the patience of a two-year-old. Who knew what the Begarans could do with their stolen embryos by the time they finally reached full speed again?

The chair on her left where Wade should be sat empty. Her First Officer was out overseeing their progress in the engine room where the Fashin Teku were hard at work getting their tech integrated with the ship’s propulsion systems. In Dana’s opinion, it was the least they could do after stealing something so precious from them. The technology behind their upgrades was complex, but as far as she understood it, their advanced drive system, when coupled with their targeting coordinates, could propel them by bending space. 

Ensign Cliff Harden cleared his throat from his standing station on her left. “Is everything all right, Captain?” he asked, glancing from her tapping fingers back to her face. 

She waved him off. “I’m fine. I just want to know where we are on the upgrades. Any other reports coming in?”

He rolled his eyes. “No, but I’ll check again.” 

Dana’s eyes flew to his face. “Was that a tone, Ensign?”

“No, ma–Captain. No tone intended.”

When Wade returned from engineering, Dana leaped out of her seat. He looked like he was fuming. She leaned in, whispering, “Are you all right?”

“I’m fine,” he said, his voice several decibels louder than hers had been, causing the bridge crew to turn in their direction.

Dana raised an eyebrow at him, and he shook his head. It was all right if he didn’t want to talk about it, but he didn’t need to shout. She tried not to let it bother her, though it grated on her nerves that he’d behave this way in front of the others. 

Their interactions had been off since she’d refused to officiate his wedding ceremony. Dana wanted to put it behind them as soon as possible. Rido, the Healer, had agreed to perform the ceremony in her place—thank the Merciful. Neither the bride nor groom had said much to her since. Dana couldn’t even be sure she’d be welcome at the wedding anymore. She didn’t particularly want to attend the wedding of her ex, but she’d been willing to put that aside. Marrying them, however, was an entirely different matter. To Dana, it seemed more than a little inappropriate.

“Commander, report,” Dana ordered, adjusting her tone and volume to match his terse one.

Wade blinked, as if he didn’t understand her. Dana frowned. 

“Commander? Are you sure you’re all right?”

Wade shook his head muttering to himself. Then he lifted his hands and let them drop slapping hard against his sides. “I did my best, Captain. They’re about as worthless as fleas on a dog.” 

It was Dana’s turn to blink. He hadn’t been down there that long. Perhaps there were some compatibility issues they hadn’t considered. She needed every advantage she could get against the Begarans.

“Aren’t the Fashin Teku helping you?” she asked. “If they’re not pulling their weight, they can get off a lot sooner than the space station.” Dana wasn’t about to tolerate anything from them. They’d done enough damage.

“That would be way too good for them,” Wade muttered, sitting down beside her and then standing up again in agitation.

“That’s all you had to say. Have security escort them to the brig. I’ll deal with them myself later.”

“Ensign, have security escort our Fashin Teku guests to the brig,” Wade said.

“Yes, sir,” Cliff said as he relayed the message. A moment later, he looked back up, confusion on his face. “Um, I’m sorry, sir . . . they won’t do it.”

Dana stood from her seat to face him. “What do you mean they won’t do it?”

Cliff cleared his throat. “Well, um, they sent an audio message. Would you like me to play it for you?”

“Out with it, Ensign,” Wade snapped. 

Cliff looked nervous. “Are you sure you want me to play it aloud?”

Dana placed her hands on her hips. “Ensign, either play the message, or relay it, if that’s not asking too much.”

Cliff shrugged and pressed the buttons on the panel that would allow the entire bridge to hear the message:

“Tell the Commander we’re a bit busy at the moment, and if he’d like to get off of his backside, he can take care of the lousy pirates himself.”

Dana’s mouth fell open a beat before she was able to recover. “Who was that, Ensign?”

“I’m not sure, Captain. There’s no identification code. It’s from a panel on level four.”

“Send security to—” 

Wade cut her off by reaching over the panel, grabbing Cliff by the front of his shirt, and lifting him off the floor.

“Commander!” Dana reached out and pulled on the back of Wade’s uniform. “Let him go! What’s wrong with you? The message didn’t come from him, it came from our security.”

Wade was breathless. He couldn’t seem to focus on her voice. 

Dana clutched him by the back of the shirt, and with the help of Valente, pulled him off of Cliff. “I think you need to take a breather.”

Wade blinked as if she’d slapped him. His eyes were a pinkish color. “What?”

“Valente,” she continued, “escort the Commander to his quarters.”

***To Be Continued***


Thank you for reading this preview! You can get your copy from Amazon today.

Thoughts? Reactions? Comment below!

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Support Awesome Authors by Paying What You Want https://tsvalmond.com/support-awesome-authors-by-paying-what-you-want/ Thu, 11 Feb 2021 15:00:00 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=2337 SFWA Expansive Futures Storybundle has arrived and my book Exodus is included!

I’m sure you’ve got some questions like what is SFWA and how is buying this bundle any different than buying each book from my regular ebook platform?

First of all, Science Fiction Writers of America (SFWA) is an organization dedicated to promoting and supporting science fiction and fantasy writers in the United States and worldwide.

Amy Duboff curated this bundle for SFWA featuring award-winning authors and fresh new voices. The Expansive Futures StoryBundle is designed for fans of futuristic sci-fi and space opera.

StoryBundle was created to give a platform for independent authors to showcase their work and a source of quality titles for thirsty readers. StoryBundle works with authors to create bundles of ebooks that can be purchased by readers at their desired price.

So how much is it, really?

For a limited time, StoryBundle lets you decide what price you want to pay for these stellar sci-fi stories. For $5 (or more, if you’re feeling generous), you’ll get the basic bundle of five books in any ebook format—WORLDWIDE.

Seriously!

You get to choose how much of your purchase goes to the authors and how much goes to help keep StoryBundle running. No matter what you donate, part of the proceeds goes to supporting SFWA and the indie authors.

Donate more and get bonus books. Even if you don’t have the money to give financially, you can help out by spreading the word.

Check out the links below to read the synopses for each book and share the Storybundle with your friends.

For more information, visit our website at storybundle.com, tweet us at @storybundle and like us on Facebook.

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Starship Hope Marauders: Release Announcement https://tsvalmond.com/starship-hope-marauders-release-announcement/ Tue, 09 Feb 2021 16:05:39 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=2317 Welcome to the family, Marauders!

There’s a very special place in my heart for pirates. Especially of the alien variety.

In this book, we have a first-encounter with two alien species. It’s my dearest wish that you enjoy reading as much fun as it was to write.

Check out the preview here if you haven’t already or dive right in.

Marauders is the second book in the Starship Hope series and it’s available today for Kindle Unlimited subscriptions or purchase on Amazon in ebook and print copies.

If you want to be notified before everyone else be sure to join the VIP monthly mailing list. It’s the big orange button at the top of the page 😀 or click here.

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Starship Hope: Marauders ~SNEAK PEEK~ https://tsvalmond.com/starship-hope-marauders-sneak-peek/ Mon, 11 Jan 2021 15:00:00 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=2261 The second book in the Starship Hope Series has arrived and Marauders has got all your favorites: aliens, tech, and more hope.

ABOUT THE BOOK

How far is too far to save the human race?

Captain Dana Pinet is struggling to put her demons to rest while carrying the last of humanity still reeling from the loss of their world onboard the Starship Hope

She and the crew will be tested yet again when they come into contact with a group of plucky aliens enthralled by their circumstances and eager to befriend them. Things turn ugly when the aliens make off with precious cargo and half their dwindling supplies. 

In pursuit of the thieves, the crew discovers they’re not the only ones after the pirates, and getting caught in alien cross-fire will only make matters worse. If Dana can’t track down the pirates and their stolen cargo, it may bring about the extinction of the human race. 

Marauders is the thrilling second book in the science fiction series Starship Hope. If you like intriguing first contact with aliens and survival at all-costs scenarios, you’ll love this second book by T.S. Valmond.

Marauders is now available on Amazon!


The beginning…

Captain Dana Pinet pulled back her elbow, sweat dripping into her eyes. She held her arm extended palm out, fingers curled, waiting for the next strike. She made slight adjustments to her stance, shifting the weight between her feet before she used her body’s momentum to propel her forward. 

She missed kicking Commander Wade Chance’s head by millimeters. 

He lunged at her, lifting her from the waist, the impact of the forward motion dropping them both to the yellow mat under their bare feet. Dana struggled to take in a breath underneath him. Wade didn’t give her long to recover. He straddled her, one leg on either side of her waist, his arms keeping her pinned to the mat. Dana used a scissor kick to buck him off, and it took another quick kick to his chest to force him back and off of her. She scrambled to her feet again, ready for the next advance. Wade wasn’t normally so predictable, charging again from the same direction. At the last moment, Dana dodged to one side while extending her right leg to trip him. He fell facedown onto the mat. 

Before she could enjoy the view from above him, he rolled up onto his feet. Face to face again, she had to duck to dodge his left swing. She blocked several open-handed hits with her arms, but he hit like a hammer, even with his palms. Dana stumbled backward, grasping for balance. Wade took the advantage, using his entire body to plow her back onto the floor. In a practiced maneuver, he slid behind her, keeping most of his weight on her hips, wrapped his right arm tight around her neck, and held. She pulled at his arm, but it might as well have been a steel pipe. Trapped, with no way up, she couldn’t take in a full breath. Stars swam in her eyes before her hand slapped twice against his arm in surrender. 

He released her in an instant. She gasped for breath for a moment, coughing when the air came in too fast. Then she stumbled to her feet.

Wade circled her, preparing for another charge. “You all right?” 

Wade circled her preparing for another charge. Dana wanted to wipe that triumphant smirk off his face. 

She cleared her throat before speaking. “I’m fine. Don’t look so disappointed.”

“What can I say, I’m glad you’re out of practice. You almost had me.” 

He wiped at the sweat streaming down his face with the bottom of his shirt, revealing the toned stomach underneath. 

Dana glanced away from him, letting her eyes settle on the matted wall behind him. She rolled her shoulders as a bead of sweat made a trail down her back. Her arms and legs burned with exertion. 

Their morning runs had turned into morning workouts, and earlier that week, Wade had taken his first swing at her. He’d taunted her to the mat until she’d flung herself at him to shut him up. They’d both ended the workout sopping wet and with exhausted smiles on their faces. 

 This morning they’d run for ten minutes before sparring again. They were both fresh and energized this time, and Dana planned to nail him to the mat. Wade was lean and strong, with lightning-fast reflexes, but he lacked the strategic thought that had kept her out of his grasp for the better part of an hour. The only reason he’d gotten her the last time was because she could feel herself tiring.

“How many fingers am I holding up?” Wade asked, flashing three fingers at her and wiggling them.

“Why?” 

She stopped circling and stood still.

“You look like you took a major beating. Besides, I don’t want the captain to pass out in front of the crew. It’s bad for morale.” 

Her unwavering charge at his chest, head down, cut off Wade’s laughter. He tried to dodge, but she anticipated the movement. He had all of his weight balanced on his right front foot, and she corrected her course in time to bash him in the side. He groaned before he hit the ground. She used her legs to pin down his arms. He wiggled and squirmed but couldn’t get free. Instead, he managed to get his legs underneath him and lift her off the ground. With his hands released, he forced her back to the mat. The thud as she hit made him hesitate, but she groaned, proving she had some breath left. 

He wrapped his arms and legs around her until she couldn’t move, pinning her to the mat. 

“Such a cheater, plowing into my ribcage,” he said, still holding her tight. 

Dana wasn’t ready to give up, but as she struggled, he only tightened his physical hold on her body like a snake. She placed her hand flat to the floor and slapped it twice, releasing Wade’s hold on her. She didn’t bother getting up, but turned her head to face him when he lay down on the mat beside her.

“Not bad. Better than the first time.”

Dana wiped the back of her hand over her forehead. 

“I can’t wait to knock that smug smile off your face.” 

Dana wiped the back of her hand over her forehead.

“You and how many more?”

“I don’t want to bring someone else in on this, but if you don’t start letting me win, I might have to.” 

“Don’t be a poor loser. I’m sure you’ll be better next time. Maybe stretch a little more.” 

She punched him in the shoulder. 

“What did you do that for?” he howled.

It was Dana’s turn to smirk. She knew he’d never hit her back, and it hadn’t hurt him as much as he complained. 

They both fell into a comfortable silence, not filling it with frivolous conversation as they stretched out their sore muscles. Dana winced when she reached her left arm over her head.

“Sorry about that.” Wade’s expression changed, his eyebrows drawing together in genuine concern and his voice softened. “Sorry about that.”

He was biting his lower lip in the way he did when he felt guilty about something. She hated that face. She’d seen it before, back when they used to date. Maybe that was why she wanted to plant him face-first into the mat.

“Don’t,” she said.

“What?”

“Don’t do that.” Dana waved a hand in the air around his face. “Don’t act like you’ve broken me.”

Wade’s face tightened, and he looked like he was gritting his teeth.

“I’m fine,” she insisted.

Dana waved a hand in the air again, this time as if encompassing the room and everything in it. Needing to fill the now-awkward silence with conversation, she leaped on the first thing that came to her mind.

“Have I mentioned that every time I watch my mother’s vid message, I cry at the sight of my dog?”

Wade’s eyes came up and met hers for an instant longer than she could take without looking away. 

“Really?”

Dana laughed at herself, but the same sadness gripped her chest even now. She swallowed back the emotion, willing herself not to cry. 

“When I watch my mother talking about her day, we’re as close as ever. Then…” Dana’s voice hitched as she fought back tears. “She mentions Viktor, and she shows him sitting by the door. I break every time. Seems wrong to be mourning my dog more than my mother.”

“It doesn’t surprise me. She was larger than life. The woman was shameless. Fearless.” He huffed out a laugh. “Remember the officer’s ball? She came with you and stole the entire night, as I recall.”

Dana could picture her mother that night, dressed in one of her new evening gowns, twirling in front of the dignitaries and political figures of the time as if she were their queen. They loved her, and even a few of the husbands got angry jabs from their wives when she passed by them.

 “She knew how to light up a room.”

“Yeah. You have it, too, but you wield yours a little different. You command a room where she entertains it.”

Dana had never thought of her and her mother sharing anything other than DNA. She was most often compared to her father. Even after months of mourning, her mother couldn’t seem to bond with Dana the way she could with everyone else. 

Wade continued circling back around to her mother.

“You cry for your dog because Viktor lived, ate, and ran with you,” Wade continued. “He was your constant companion, and an innocent. He didn’t understand why you left or how little time he had. Your mother would have lived out her last days to the fullest, you know that. Oh, I’m sorry,” he said when he caught her crying. 

He lifted his hand to touch her, but then dropped it as if she were on fire. It only made it worse. Rebellious tears sprang into her eyes and he reached out a hand again, this time to hold her shoulder.

“I think that’s it. Viktor didn’t understand, and somehow that’s worse.” Dana wiped an angry hand over her face, but she didn’t shrug him off. “Enough,” she said, more to herself than to Wade.

Wade cleared his throat. “While we’re on the subject of vids, I need your help with something.”

Dana latched onto the change of subject like a life raft.

“What’s wrong? What happened?” 

Wade shook his head. 

“It’s what’s not happening.”

Dana waited for him to continue. It sounded personal, and she gave him the time and space to share when he was ready, as he’d done for her. They’d come so far in such a short time. She would never have dreamed just a few weeks ago that they’d be here, talking about their grief like old friends.

“I shouldn’t be bothering you with this, but I’m worried about Maggie.”

Dana kept her eyes from widening and pressed her lips together to hide her surprise. The last thing she wanted to talk about with Wade was Maggie. His boisterous reporter girlfriend was his business. Maggie was a woman used to getting what she wanted, and Dana wasn’t sure she trusted her. She told herself it wasn’t just that she always seemed to have unblemished skin and perfect hair. Or the fact she’d brought more shoes with her onto the Hope than any one woman in space deserved. 

She banked the jealousy creeping through her and focused on Wade. He was her friend now, and she would be there for him. She waved him on with both hands. 

“I get it. You need a female opinion. Let’s have it.”

“That’s it. You’ll tell me if I’m being an insensitive tool.”

“Most likely, but I’m listening.”

He grinned and gave her an exaggerated eye roll before he continued. 

“She hasn’t been the same since we received our messages.”

“Everyone’s been unsettled by those videos. They were essentially carrying voices from the grave,” Dana said, thinking of her own sleepless nights, the nightmares she’d been having.

“True, but at least you’re talking about yours.”

“Maggie isn’t?”

“No. She won’t tell me anything about what’s in her message. Worse, if I come in and catch her watching it, she’ll turn it off. Then she’ll pretend like I didn’t just see her crying over whoever sent the message.”

“That doesn’t seem suspicious. Have you shared your message with her?”

Wade tensed as his face grimaced.

“Not really. We’ve talked about it, though. It’s from my mom. Dad doesn’t say much of anything, but I can’t exactly show her the vid.”

“Why not?”

It was Wade’s turn to clam up. His cheeks reddened, and he shook his head, as if deciding about something. 

“She… says some things about you that Maggie wouldn’t appreciate.”

“About me?”

Wade stood up, then gave Dana a hand to her feet. It was even harder to bank her curiosity after that statement. She wanted to know more––needed to know more.

Wade must have read her expression because he raised an eyebrow. “Put it this way, if Maggie saw it, she’d be unhappy.”

“Has she met your mother?”

“Yes, several times,” Wade said before looking down at the floor.

Dana cleared her throat. 

“I see your point. Well… maybe that’s why she’s been holding back. Because you haven’t shared yours.”

Wade bit his full lower lip while he thought about it. 

“No, I don’t think that’s it. We’ve talked about mine at length. She hasn’t asked to see it, and she’s satisfied with my summarizing it. With hers, there’s nothing. She won’t even say if it’s from a family member or a friend.” He ran a hand through his brown curls. She’d seen that tick before when he was anxious. “I wish she’d say something about it like you have. You and I have no problem talking about our messages. What’s on hers that she doesn’t want me to see?”

Dana was pondering the same question. Maggie was hiding something. Something so big she didn’t want her boyfriend to know. Though it fed into her suspicions of the woman, this wasn’t the time to tell Wade that.

“I can’t answer that. But you obviously care for her as much as she cares for you. There’s no reason to push her. Be there for her when she’s ready.”

The words were out of her mouth before she’d thought about them. Dana leaned down, putting her hands to the floor attempting to hide her face as she changed the subject. 

“You could invite her to come workout with you in the mornings. Maybe that will get her talking. She’ll be too exhausted to resist.”

“Yeah, right,” he scoffed. “Have you met Maggie? She doesn’t wake up until noon, and she works until midnight. Besides… she doesn’t exactly know I meet up with you every morning.”

His words caught up to her brain a second later, and she took a step back from him. 

“Wait, what?”

His mouth opened to answer when a loud boom, followed by the rocking of the room, brought them to their knees. They both scrambled to get back to their feet, running for the comms a moment later. Dana put her hand over the panel and spoke.

“Status? Are we under attack?”

“No, it originated inside the ship.”

Something rocked the ship a second time. A wave of electricity ripped through the panel to her hand, coursing up her arm. She flew backward hard against Wade, who’d been right behind her, and crashed onto the mat several feet away. They peeled themselves off the floor and crawled for the door. Wade reached it first. Dana watched him grip its edges through blurred vision, trying to force the sealed doors apart. He was beating on the door and calling for help when dizziness overtook her. 

She shook her head in a feeble attempt to force back the blackness creeping along the edges of her vision but failed.

Dana opened her eyes, trying to make sense of her surroundings, but everything was so dark, she couldn’t make them out. 

Panic filled her when she realized she couldn’t see. 

She must have screamed, because suddenly heavy hands grabbed at her. She slapped at them. The annoying humming in her ears blocked all sound from getting through, even her own voice. 

Then she felt the soothing touch of fingers on the side of her face. The figure leaned closer, and she could barely make out Wade’s features. She wasn’t blind, her eyes were beginning to adjust to the dark. Dana stopped hitting at the hands and relaxed into them.

His mouth opened and closed in wide, exaggerated movements. He wanted to kiss her? That had to be it. He’d turned off the lights and lit the candles. She arched her back and lifted her chin toward him. He was so handsome. She remembered the feel of his kisses as her eyes fluttered closed, awaiting the warmth of his mouth on hers. 

Then his strong hands shook her. Her eyes went to his shadowed face again. Something had made his features so severe. Why was he so angry? No… not angry… worried. Something made his features so severe. What had she done to cause that facial expression? Did it have something to do with the dark.

The room was still tilting and spinning as Dana reached out a hand to rest it on the side of his face. She wanted to make the dizziness stop and after a long span of silence the room’s gyrations slowed. Wade smiled down at her, his mouth moving again. What was he saying? 

Even with the buzzing gone, it was like listening through water. Dana reached up to rub her ears, finding they were wet. Had they been swimming? She tried to look at her brown hand, but it was invisible in the dark. The skin of her hand hurt as if it had been burned, and she couldn’t see why. The buzzing in her ears was still too loud. Her hand went to her mouth where Wade hadn’t kissed her, then to her face. 

“Dana, can you hear me?” Wade’s voice filtered in through the buzzing. He still sounded too far away.

“My ears are ringing,” Dana said as she tried to sit up. “What happened?”

His hand was heavy against her chest, forcing her back down. 

“Not yet. You’re hurt. Let me find something to help.”

The haze in her mind was parting, and she was beginning to remember where she was. Dana lay still, her back against the mat of the exercise room floor, assessing her injuries. It was taking her mind longer than it should have to replay the last things she remembered. They’d been sparring a few moments ago… had he knocked her out? No… they’d both been on their feet near the door. They’d been talking about Maggie… 

Her face burned as she realized she’d almost reached up and kissed him in her semi-conscious delusion moments ago. She was thankful the dark hid her embarrassment. She’d almost reached up and kissed him in her unconscious delusion. 

Wade gave her just enough time to revel in her embarrassment before he returned with a round, palm-sized flashlight. He set the flashlight down, face up between them, as he worked. He held a couple tubes in one hand and blue bandages in the other. He rubbed a medicinal cream from one tube over her hand, then wrapped it before moving along to tend to the wounds she hadn’t yet noticed further up her arm. Only when he’d finished did he ease her into a sitting position. 

“How long was I out?” 

“A few minutes,” he said, passing her an open water tube. “What’s the last thing you remember?”

She sipped the cool liquid, easing the scratch of her dry throat. “A loud boom.”

“Do you remember me speaking to Cliff over the comms?”

“No, what did he say?”

“That the cause was internal. Then an electrical surge took out the comms with your hand still on it. Blew us both back onto the mat. We shook it off. We were both headed back to the door for help, but when I turned around, you’d passed out.”

“Did anyone hear you?”

“No, and if it took out the communications system and the doors, the damage must be pretty extensive.”

 “So we’re stuck here for now.” Dana looked up. The nearest crawling tubes were three men high. The ceiling was even further up. They’d never reach an exit conduit in a room designed for intense climbing and jumping.

“I’ve already assessed the room,” Wade told her. “There’s no way out of here without help, but at least we’re safe. The equipment is stable, and there’s nothing dangerous to us here.”

Dana hadn’t even considered the equipment; how easily a running machine could have fallen on her while she was out cold. 

Wade positioned himself beside her, his back against the wall. 

“What are you doing?”

“Getting more comfortable,” he said, stretching out his legs and leaning his head against the wall, his eyes closed. 

“Why aren’t you figuring another way out of here?”

“Like I said, there’s no way out.”

How could he be so calm? He sat there, seemingly without a worry about how they’d get out. It was infuriating.

Dana leaned forward until she was on all fours before getting her feet under her. Her knees wobbled, but she stood on her own. She looked back to flash Wade a smile filled with pride, but his eyes were still closed tight. Dana poked out a finger toward his face to catch him peeking, but he didn’t flinch. She snatched up the flashlight and took a tour of the room. 

It was as Wade had told her. The heavy equipment was undisturbed. The vents were too high. Even if there was double the equipment to pile on top of each other, she still wouldn’t be able to reach them. Dana checked behind panels and shifted a rack of towels to one side to look for more ventilation shafts, but found nothing. 

She circled the room until she stood in front of the main doors again, the charred remains of the console reminding her of what had happened. Thankfully it hadn’t been a full console terminal, or she might not have survived the electrical surge. Dana beat the edge of her left fist against the doors and shouted for help. Then she leaned against the door, pressing her ear to it, and listened for anything coming from the other side. 

Nothing.

Defeated, Dana returned to where she’d been sitting and slid down to sit next to Wade to wait, placing the flashlight face up again between them.

His smirk was back. “Told you.” His smirk was back.

“I needed to see for myself.”

“Feel that?”

Dana put her palms against the mat and nodded. “We’re not moving.”

“I think whatever it was took out the engines. We’re not going anywhere.”

“I should go stand by the door in case someone passes by.”

Dana moved to stand, but Wade’s hand snaked out and grabbed her shoulder, avoiding her burned arm. He turned his head and opened one eye.

“Not so fast. You need to relax.”

“I’m the captain of this ship. I believe you take your orders from me, not the other way around.”

The look she gave his hand, still on her shoulder, would have melted any other officer. Wade, however, held her gaze. His hand remained firm, keeping her in place.

“You’re injured, and the dizziness could return,” he reasoned. “It would be great if you didn’t make things worse for me.”

“For you?”

“Yes. As you said, you’re the captain. If you become incapacitated because of your stubbornness, I’ll be in command of the ship, and then I’ll be forced to work.”

The laugh escaped before she could slap her good hand over her mouth. Dana quickly regained her composure and shrugged off his hand. He let go, and she settled in next to him, careful not to touch him. She still gave him a side glare, though, wanting to wipe that know-it-all smirk off his face. 

“They’ll come for us,” he said. “Just wait.”

“Fine.” 

They sat in companionable silence. Dana had lost track of just how long they waited before something knocked against the gymnasium doors. Before Wade managed to pull her to her feet, something else hit the door with a loud metal-on-metal thwack. She and Wade were standing side-by-side when a male ARI with short blond hair forced the doors apart.

From behind it, Maggie came rushing in, the flashlight in her hand shining blindingly into their eyes.

“Hey, do you mind?” Dana asked, throwing up a hand.

“Oops.” 

The light in Maggie’s hand lowered, and Dana could make out their features again. The ARI remained at the door, but the corridor behind it was still black. It seemed the power was off throughout the ship. She was about to ask about it when Maggie stopped in her tracks, looking Wade up and down. Then her eyes went to Dana’s burned arm. 

Maggie lifted her left hand to her hip and shook her head. “Well. Looks like you figured out how to get him out of his clothes again, Captain.”

Dana’s mouth fell open, but before she could respond, Wade was moving forward and wrapping his arms around Maggie. 

“Come on, Mags, it’s nothing. I sacrificed my shirt to save my Captain’s injured arm.”

To her horror, Dana looked over and realized that the blue strips wrapped around her hand and arm had come from the shirt he’d been wearing during his workout. He’d been sitting there bare-chested the entire time, and she hadn’t even noticed in the dark. 

Maggie’s pink lower lip protruded in a pout. She glanced around the room, as if expecting to see someone else. No doubt she was wondering what they were doing in the gym alone together.

Wade shrugged it off. 

“You know me. I’m quick to provide help to a damsel in distress.” He gave her a playful pinch at her waist and a peck on the cheek. He guided Maggie toward the door, then turned to smirk at Dana behind her back.

Dana set her teeth and balled her left hand into a fist. 

To make matters worse, Wade paused leaning toward the ARI to speak, 

“The captain needs medical attention. Make sure she gets to the med-bay.”

Dana wanted to scream at him, but she had a pounding headache, and burns that needed attention. Besides, it wouldn’t do her any good to be seen wearing strips of her first officer’s shirt.

“See what’s going on in the engine room, Commander, then report to the bridge,” Dana said to his back. 

“Yes, Captain.”

Maggie giggled at something he said in her ear as he leaned on her for support. They didn’t appear to be a couple having problems, like Wade had hinted at. Maggie had come straight away to help him, knowing where he was even if she didn’t know with whom. Wade might have been exaggerating.

“I am perfectly capable of carrying you to the medical bay, Captain.” The ARI held out its arms. Both were covered by sleeves, but the left hand lacked the realistic skin of the right, exposing the internal wiring and metal.

Dana gave his arms a measured look before she turned her attention to its face. The ARI was almost twice her size, but she still managed to look down her nose at him.

“Try it, and I’ll have you disassembled and used for scrap.”

***To Be Continued***


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Starship Hope: Exodus Release Announcement https://tsvalmond.com/starship-hope-exodus-release-announcement/ Fri, 01 Jan 2021 18:00:19 +0000 https://tsvalmond.com/?p=2049 Yes, I know what day it is. Why do think I waited so late to send this to your inbox? 😀

In case you’re just waking up, I have a huge announcement and it couldn’t wait for the second of January.

Starship Hope: Exodus has arrived and I can’t wait for you to sink your teeth into this new and improved story of Hope Saved.

The first version of the story was published a couple of years ago and didn’t have the beef it has now. I mean there’s a reason why people go boneless.

The story picks up where the prequel leaves off.

Wait! You haven’t read the prequel?

Don’t let me stop you.

VIP Readers already have the link to a digital copy in your inbox.

If you’re not signed up as a VIP then what are you waiting for?

Get one delivered to your email box with the hour. You won’t regret it.

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