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Intergalactic Soulmates Books 1-4
Intergalactic Soulmates Books 1-4 Read online
Intergalactic Soulmates Books 1-4
Annabelle Rex
Contents
Randar
Blurb
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Epilogue
Author’s Note
Cael
Blurb
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Epilogue
Author’s Note
Garrant
Blurb
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Epilogue
Author’s Note
Tarkken
Blurb
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Epilogue
Author’s Note
Acknowledgments
The Story Continues…
Also by Annabelle Rex
About the Author
Copyright © 2020 Prospect and Raven
All rights reserved.
* * *
This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, businesses, events or locales is purely coincidental.
* * *
Reproduction in whole or part of this publication without express written consent is strictly prohibited.
Created with Vellum
She felt a thrill of delight, a thrill that developed into something far more primal.
Angela Parker didn’t ask to be part of the DNA Match Program. Fresh from another failed first date, she’s ready to swear off men for good. When her best friend drunkenly decides to sign her up, Angela finds herself Matched to sexy bodyguard Randar. So he’s seven foot tall with scales… his muscular physique makes Angela go weak at the knees. But why would this gorgeous alien want her? No Humans ever did.
Randar Cresli doesn’t like Humans. They’re always causing problems for him - particularly the violent protesters who want the Intergalactic Community and their Match Program gone. One look at Angela is enough to change his mind. She’s the most perfect woman he’s ever seen, but like most Humans, she doesn’t believe the Match test works. Can Randar convince her they really are soulmates?
1
“You know what you need?” Chelsea said, a grin spreading across her perfectly made up face. “Shots.”
Angela knew shots were a bad idea, but she was in the mood to make some mistakes. So, when the other girls cheered and clapped, Angela grinned and grabbed a bottle of vodka from her liquor cabinet. Chelsea lined up a row of shot glasses and slopped the vodka into them, passing one to each of the girls then lifting her own.
“To forgetting all about assholes who don’t know a good thing when it’s standing in front of them,” Chelsea said, before knocking her drink back.
Angela swallowed her shot down. The expensive vodka didn’t have the paintstripper taste of the stuff she got in clubs sometimes, but it still burned all the way to her stomach, leaving her with a warm feeling at her core and a sensation of cleansing, as if the alcohol was already wiping the memory of Luke away.
He’d seemed so perfect when they’d been chatting over the dating app. Funny, cute, considerate. He told her how attractive she was, made her feel girly and desired. She warned him she was tall, and he made out like he was man enough to be with a woman who had a few inches on him. He even joked that they weren’t the most important inches on a man, anyway, and sent her winky faces. Angela had such a good feeling about him.
But then they’d met, and the public jeers had started. The same old jokes about being the same height lying down, questioning who wears the trousers, that Luke trying to get his leg over would be like mountain climbing. Angela let it all wash over her. She’d been tall from a very young age - always being mistaken for an older child. At fifteen, she enjoyed a brief moment of popularity as she looked more than old enough to buy booze, and her classmates took full advantage. But as they’d all hit adulthood she’d become a novelty again. The giantess. Luke said he didn’t care, but Angela saw every jibe hit his pride like a cannonball, until, at the end of the night, he told her they didn’t have chemistry in real life, that they should stick to being friends. Angela had told him that would be nice, and agreed to chat to him later, then went home and blocked him on every platform.
Chelsea poured out a second round of shots, and Angela threw hers back straight away. Her head was starting to buzz, cotton wool settling in her brain, separating her consciousness from the pain. The memory of Luke was still present, but the hurt accompanying it seemed more distant.
“Poor Angie,” Kimberly said, wrapping her arms and a cloud of perfume round Angela’s shoulders, planting a wet kiss on her cheek. “You have the worst luck with guys.”
Angela tried not to notice the massive rock on Kimberly’s finger. Her long time boyfriend had proposed last month while they’d been travelling in Thailand. He’d organised a beach to be filled with candles for when he went down on one knee and presented Kimberly with a ring that cost more than the average person’s yearly salary. Kimberly and Adam were the perfect power couple - everything about them absolutely complementary from personality to skin tone. All Angela’s girlfriends had guys like this. Kimberly and Adam. Chelsea and Mark the Architect. Susan and her childhood sweetheart James. Zenab and Nadeem. All of them perfect matches.
Meanwhile, Angela was forever alone - no one to match her six foot three frame.
After the third shot, her friends were discussing who they could set Angela up with next.
“Henry Bowles is recently single,” Susan suggested.
Chelsea made a striking motion with her hand, nearly toppling what was left of the vodka. “He’s recently single because he’s a dick,” she said.
Kimberly cackled, and Angela found herself laughing too.
“What about Mark the Architect’s cousin?” Zenab said. “He was tall, dark and handsome.”
“Angus is all those things, and Scottish to boot,” Chelsea said, then grinned wickedly. “But I heard a rumour…”
She held up her hand and wiggled her pinky finger. The girls shrieked with laughter.
“I would like to point out,” Chelsea said, raising the vodka bottle again. “That this is not a problem Mark the Architect has.”
“Are you going to stop calling him Mark the Architect any time soon?” Kimberly said.
Chelsea quirked one elegant eyebrow as she poured out the next round of shots. “When I can call him ‘husband’ instead.”
r /> Once that shot had settled in her stomach, Angela found herself feeling morose.
“There isn’t anyone out there as perfect for me as Mark the Architect is perfect for Chelsea,” she moaned.
Her head was in Susan’s lap, and Susan stroked her hair, making soothing noises.
“You just need to find yourself a basketball player,” Zenab said.
“Jamal was a basketball player, I’m put off basketball players for life.”
“Which one was Jamal?” Kimberly asked.
“Foot fetish guy,” Chelsea, Susan and Zenab said in unison.
“Ah,” Kimberly said, then shrugged. “He did get you a super cute pair of shoes.”
“That I can never wear because I’m already taller than everybody,” Angela moaned.
“I hope you at least kept them to wear in your bedroom from time to time,” Chelsea said. “For your own pleasure, of course.”
Angela gestured vaguely to her wardrobe, where the offending shoes were stashed. Chelsea went over and pulled out the shoebox, opening it and peeling back the tissue paper to reveal the shoes within. Angela still salivated a little to look at them. They were black at the heel, blending down to a bright red at the toe, patent leather, with a stiletto heel. Flirty, sexy, and a perfect fit. But she could never wear them, because the last thing she needed was another five inches.
“So pretty,” Susan crooned, running her finger along the side of the shoe, tracing the blend from black to red.
“If I were you I’d just wear these all the time, every first date,” Kimberly said, her eyes shining with want as she took the shoe from Susan. “Because Mr Right is definitely the guy who can handle you while you’re wearing these babies.”
“Shoes bought for me by another man?” Angela raised her eyebrows.
“Shoes donated to the cause of you looking fabulous by an idiot who was only interested in your feet,” Susan corrected, patting her on the head.
Angela pushed herself upright out of Susan’s lap. The room tilted a little, before settling back in its place.
“I appreciate you guys trying to make me feel better,” Angela said, “but I’m starting to realise there is no man on Earth who is going to be perfect for me. It’s okay. I’ve decided. I’m going to start my cat collection tomorrow.”
“No man on Earth?” Zenab said, eyes glittering with mischief.
Chelsea pulled the website up on her tablet. Angela pushed her mane of blonde hair out of her face and tried to get her eyes to focus on the screen as Chelsea pushed it into her hands.
FIND YOUR PERFECT MATCH, the headline screamed in bright pink letters.
Susan snatched it from Angela’s hands before her eyes could fully focus on a secondary headline - something about intense sexual chemistry.
“That’s not the main website, that’s just some advertiser trying to sell the service,” Susan said, punching in a different search and pulling up a new website that was all clean white lines and classy images. “This is the official website, none of that bawdy nonsense.”
The Intergalactic DNA Matching Database, Angela read, her eyes swimming just a little.
“Here,” Chelsea said, taking the tablet back and clearing her throat. “‘DNA matching is a commonplace process in the Intergalactic Community. Most citizen of the known universe submit their DNA at the age culturally accepted to be ‘adulthood’. For Humans, this would be eighteen, or sixteen with parental consent. The Database searches your DNA against others recorded and finds your perfect match.’ This sounds very dry and scientific.”
Susan rolled her eyes. “That’s because it’s the official website. Where they talk about the science behind it and stuff. Not just some sensational blogger talking about falling madly in lust with your match.”
“Do you fall madly in lust with your match?” Angela asked, thinking vaguely that she might like a bit of madly in lust.
“Nobody knows yet, there haven’t been any successful matched pairs,” Zenab said.
“I thought there had?” Chelsea said.
“People have been matched,” Zenab said, “but none of those matches have met yet, because they all live a long way away. Like, lightyears or whatever.”
“I’d like to be lightyears away from Luke,” Angela muttered. Her head felt heavy now, the kind of lead weight feeling that came only with tiredness or far too much alcohol.
“Then sign up,” Kimberly said. “Maybe you’ll be matched with an alien hottie.”
“But what if he has tentacles?” Susan said.
Kimberly waggled her eyebrows, smirking. “I can think of a few things I could do with tentacles.”
The other girls cackled even as Susan protested that Kimberly was a pervert.
“Have people really signed up for this?” Angela said, taking the tablet back and scanning through more of the website.
Like any human website trying to sell something, it had case studies, with pictures of matched pairs and little quotes from them talking about their happiness. It was exactly how Angela would have structured the website, bar one small detail - none of the matches were Human.
When the aliens had arrived a year ago, there had at first been panic, but after several months of establishing communications, peace treaties and some basic rules of engagement, they had been allowed to start integrating with society. They brought some incredible technological and medical advancements, and the DNA matching program.
The website started autoplaying a video of the main alien Ambassador, Prince Cael, Crown Prince of the Allortasian royal family. He was human-looking, except for his hair which blended from black to bright blue, and his eyes, which were also blue, but far too bright to ever pass for Human.
“He is so attractive,” Zenab sighed, speaking over whatever the prince was saying in lightly accented English about DNA matches bringing the Human community closer to the Intergalactic one.
“If it weren’t for Mark the Architect, I would definitely be up for getting down and dirty with that,” Chelsea said.
“No tentacles,” Susan said.
“He’s too pretty,” Angela said.
“Girl, if he’s not making your ovaries do a little dance, you aren’t going to be matched with him, are you?” Kimberly said. “It’s about your perfect match.”
Perfect. Angela couldn’t even imagine what perfect would be. Perfect right now would be the room not spinning. Not needing Chelsea to help her up and take her to her room. The other girls not saying goodbye and heading back to their perfect partners. Someone other than Chelsea tucking her in to her bed and kissing her on the head.
“Someone who makes me feel small,” she murmured.
“What’s that?” Chelsea said.
“That would be perfect. Someone who makes me feel small. And who’s really good in bed.”
Chelsea said something else, but Angela was out.
2
An insistent buzzing sound barged its way into Angela’s awareness. She cracked open her eyes, the sunlight breaking through the gap in her curtains cutting into them like a knife. Her head pounded, her mouth felt full of fuzz, and someone would not stop texting her phone. She grabbed the device, hitting the silent button, then slammed it back down on her dresser, before burying her face in her pillows. She didn’t have anything to get up for today, thank goodness, she would just stay in bed until she could face the world.
But of course, she was awake now, and that meant her bladder, her stomach, her pounding head were all making themselves known. She dragged herself out of bed, used the bathroom, brushing the disgusting taste out of her mouth, before heading to the kitchen for some toast and a strong coffee. Only after she’d eaten four slices and nearly finished her drink did she venture back into her bedroom and pick up her phone.
There were so many notifications they were all stacked on top of each other. Angela could only read the last message sent by Chelsea.
* * *
R u awake yet? Pls call me :(
* * *
br /> Angela snapped to alertness, clicking through to Chelsea’s messages, reading through the thread.
* * *
So…. I did a thing
Sorry
I thought it was a good idea last night when I was drunk
I’m so stupid
Sorry sorry sorry
But… I took ur sample to the DNA Match clinic
Stupid drunk brain wanted u to b happy
Stupid drunk brain is an idiot and I never should have done that without ur permission
I’m a dick
I’m so sorry
Ange?
Pls talk to me Ange
:(
:(
:(
R u awake yet? Pls call me :(
* * *
Angela’s hand shook as she turned to the other messages on her phone. They were from an unknown number.