DOPHIN'S PLAYGROUND
Ellora's Cave

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Excerpt - Reviews

Dr. Jasmine "Jaz" Quinlan's life's work is to care for marine mammals at the California Bay Aquarium. What she'd rather do is spend her life in the ocean with the creatures she loves.

When a dozen dolphins beach themselves, she takes them into her care, bound and determined to save them.

Triton, guardian of the dolphins and a member of Oceana, an undersea civilization, wants nothing to do with land humans - especially females. But he's forced to work with Jaz to help the dolphins.

Something about Triton compels Jaz. He lights a fire within her that no ocean can douse. She's falling in love with him, and when she finds out who he is and where he lives, her wildest dreams become a reality.

Despite his preconceived notions, Triton finds himself falling for Jaz's warmth and caring nature. She loves the sea as much as he does. After one woman he loved left the oceans to live on land, he's not about to open his heart. But Jaz awakens desires he has to fight to keep buried. When two different worlds separate Jaz and Triton, love must find a way to unite them.

 

Dr. Jasmine "Jaz" Quinlan peered out the window of her office inside the California Bay Aquarium. The sun fought to break through the early morning fog, a gray wall so thick she could barely see the water.

Distinctive shapes lay at the water's edge. Her pulse picked up a rapid pace as she willed the sun to breach the last of the chilling summer fog.

Please don't let it be. She hoped she was wrong, she hoped what lay in the sand was some washed up driftwood, not the living, breathing creatures she loved.

As if in miraculous answer to her fervent prayers, the mist lifted just enough to showcase at least a dozen bottlenose dolphins.

They'd beached themselves, which meant they came to the shore to die.

Shit! She grabbed for the phone and called for a rescue crew, then quickly threw on her sweats, grabbed her jacket and medical kit, slipping into her tennis shoes as she was running out the door. There were no people on the beach yet, so the dolphins hadn't been discovered.

The last thing she wanted was a crowd to gather. It made her work so much more difficult when both the good intentioned and the downright curious got in the way.

In a few adrenalin-filled seconds, she'd flown down the back stairs, her shoes filling with sand as she raced the short distance from the beach to the water line.

Her heart broke at the sight of the struggling dolphins. She grabbed her kit and examined the first few she came upon, breathing a sigh of relief when she detected their heartbeats.

"They're still alive. Let's get these hoists going!" she shouted to the approaching staff members. Trucks with hoists were brought onto the beach so they could get the dolphins lifted and taken inside.

They worked tirelessly through the morning, loading the struggling dolphins one-by-one while volunteers poured water on the sick mammals to prevent dehydration.

Jaz wiped the sweat from her forehead, pushing away the annoying curly red strands of hair that flew in her face from the stiff ocean breeze. She'd long ago discarded her jacket and sweatshirt, her body soaked with the efforts of maneuvering dolphins weighing several hundred pounds. Thankfully, there were enough hands available to turn each mammal enough to slip the hoist lines underneath them.

The last of the dolphins were loaded up and delivered to one of the aquarium's tanks by nightfall.

But her work wasn't finished. Now she had to figure out what was wrong with them, and how to keep them alive. Simply returning them to the ocean would have done no good. Dolphins beached themselves when they were too sick to remain in the water. They'd just end up on the shore again tomorrow.

Crowds had gathered around the beach and watched the process. News crews hovered nearby, reporters begging for an interview. Talking to the press was not her forte. She looked frantically for Mandy Daniels, the aquarium's PR representative. Unfortunately she was nowhere to be found.

That left her to tell the press something, anything to get the cameras out of her face.

"Dr. Quinlan, do you have any idea what's wrong with the dolphins?" asked one reporter, shoving a microphone under her nose.

"Not yet, but we'll start tests right away." She headed toward the aquarium, knowing that the media couldn't follow beyond the gates.

"Do you think it's pollution? Perhaps an oil spill?"

"Doubtful. There's no record of a spill and the ocean around the aquarium is tested regularly since we pump sea water into our tanks."

"How long do you think before - "

"No more questions." Jaz reached the gate, swiped her ID card and slid through without listening to the tail-end of the reporter's question. She'd never before appreciated the sound of the lock automatically clicking the gates shut, but now she was glad they kept the hungry reporters at bay.

With a sigh of relief, she hurried up the back stairs and quickly changed into her wetsuit, then rushed to the pool where her staff were already busily taking blood samples and monitoring the vital signs of the ailing dolphins.

"Skin temperature and tone on this one seem within normal ranges." Bob Pine, one of her assistants, looked up as she entered the shallow part of the water, then bent his head to his work again. She waded over to one of the dolphins and immediately set in taking temperatures and extracting blood samples, shouting out data to one of the other assistants standing beside the pool.

They worked systematically on all the dolphins, who seemed to exhibit no external symptoms of illness or injury. Which meant whatever was wrong with them was internal.

After putting identifying markers on all the dolphins, the staff hurried to the lab to process the blood work. Jaz existed the pool and stripped off her wetsuit, intent on rushing up to her apartment to change clothes and head to the lab. Unfortunately, she was blocked in her progress by the one person she did not want to see today.

"Dr. Quinlan, who authorized this rescue?"

Claude Morton, administrator of the California Bay Aquarium, peered at her over stylish glasses that probably cost more than she made in one year. His Armani suit was completely out of place in this environment, but to Claude, image was everything. He spared no expense, at least as it related to his own personal attire and living style. But spend a dime that wasn't in the aquarium's budget, and he paled as if the money came out of his own bank account.

"I authorized the rescue. Did you want me to stand by and watch a dozen dolphins die on the beach while a marine mammal center stood less than fifty feet away?"

He wrinkled his nose, no doubt protesting the smell of the water and mammals. Good.

"We are not responsible for what occurs outside the aquarium's property, Dr. Quinlan."

"Now's not a good time to get into this, Claude," she said, knowing calling him by his first name would irritate the piss out of him. Claude preferred to throw around his own PhD as if it were a Nobel prize and insisted the staff call him "Dr. Morton.". In fact, it was well known he came from old money, the colleges he attended practically bought and paid for by his family.

Typically, she ignored him. Today wasn't typical. She started to push past him but he grabbed her upper arm.

"We need to talk about this. You have to move these dolphins out of here, now."

Wrenching her arm from his grasp, she said, "They're ill. They need medical attention. I'm not moving them."

His face reddened. "You will move them. We do not have the funds for this kind of rescue."

"No, Claude. They're staying."

With a glaring look, he pulled his cell phone from his pocket. "Fine, I'll just have them removed if you won't."

Jaz breathed deeply to keep herself from kicking her moronic boss in the balls. Then an idea struck. "Fine. You do that. In the meantime, I'll go talk to the reporters currently drooling at the gate for a juicy story, and tell them the administrator of the aquarium would rather a dozen dolphins die because it might cost his multi-millionaire family a few thousand bucks of pocket change to save their lives."

The redness left his face in a second as he peered around the corner of the building, apparently finally noticing the camera crews and photographers. Straightening his jacket, he turned away from the crowd and sent her a scathing look that didn't scare her in the least.

"You've won this round, Dr. Quinlan, but I can assure you as soon as possible I will be relocating those dolphins."


" You do that, Claude, and I will go to the press. Only it won't be the kind of public relations you're looking for."

They stood practically nose to nose. Jaz was mindful of the reporters behind her. Thankfully they were out of earshot.

"Why do you care so much?" he asked. "They're just animals."

This was one of those days when she wished she could dive in the ocean and live with the creatures she loved so much, instead of imbeciles like Claude.

"They're mammals, Claude. Not animals. Mammals. Just like you and me. Only they're smarter than a lot of humans I know," she finished, hoping he'd grab the insult.

"They are a lower level life form. At the aquarium they're here for the entertainment of our paying customers. Hardly the same as humans."

His comment brought her blood pressure up another notch, as if she hadn't already struggled to hold in the ire which rose by the second. The only reason she stayed on at this circus fest was her fear that Claude would stop caring for the dolphins if she left.

"If I had my way we'd free them all, or close the stupid shows you insisted on bringing on board. This place used to be for study and research. Paying guests were more than pleased to simply observe the dolphins and other mammals without having them jump through a stupid hula-hoop to entertain them."

Claude sniffed. "The aquarium's income has increased dramatically since I instituted the shows two years ago."

Two years ago. Two years of a living hell. More for the dolphins than for her. Why couldn't things go back to the way they were before?

"You don't need the shows, Claude. Why don't you let me help you put a program together that's educational instead?"

He crossed his arms and peered at her over his glasses. "You? I think not. Go back to your lab, Dr. Quinlan. I'll speak to the reporters about our rescue mission."

And when exactly did the rescue mission become his rescue mission? Jaz shook her head and brushed past him without another word. Before she did something stupid, like call him a dickhead.

Somehow, some day, she'd get Claude Morton out of this aquarium and get all their lives back to normal.

Until then, she had dolphins to save.

* * * * *

"Dammit! Five more minutes and I'd have been there."

Triton paced in front of the monitors. The sick dolphins now resided in an aquarium. He'd heard their cries of distress and raced to the shore, only to find the aquarium's doctor had already arrived, as had her crew. What a fucking disaster.

For a month they'd been sick, and all of Oceana's medical advances had been unable to help them. Triton had watched them all, waiting to see if they'd beach, only they'd gotten to the shore without him knowing.

"She seems to care about them."

Triton nodded at Ronan's voice behind him. "True, but she's a land human. I want the dolphins away from her and out of that zoo."

"Nothing you can do about it now. You know as well as I do that we can't just make twelve dolphins disappear from the aquarium."

He blew out a frustrated breath. "Yeah, I know." Oceana's rules forbade calling attention to their civilization. Removing the dolphins would be impossible. At least right now. "Let's just hope the female knows what she's doing. If she further harms the dolphins I'll - "

"You'll do what?" Ronan interrupted. "You can't do anything to a land human. Our laws do not allow interference."

"Tell me something I don't already know."

"Trey," Ronan said, using his nickname. "You have a warped view of land females. You can't blame every woman for the pain Leelia caused you."

Trey ignored Ronan, concentrating instead on scanning the dolphins' vital signs. "It's strange. Whatever made them ill isn't showing up on our scanners. None of the common ailments are causing their distress."

Ronan sighed. "Probably something man made, or a pollutant we haven't come across yet."

"Fucking great. Just what we need. A mystery we can't solve." And in the meantime they could lose twelve of their dolphins. Unacceptable. But what could he do? They were in the hands of Dr. Jasmine Quinlan now. He knew of her, had heard she was a brilliant mammalian veterinarian, but she was still a land human and ignorant of the extensive knowledge available in Oceana.

"Go up there and work with her. See if you can't speed her along, or at least find out the cause so we can work on a cure down here."

No way had he heard Ronan correctly. He turned and arched a brow at the tall, imposing figure who was his brother and the leader of the guardians of the sea. "Wanna tell me that again?"

Ronan crossed his arms. "You heard me. Go up there. We'll set up impressive credentials for you. You can be another marine mammal veterinarian like Dr. Quinlan. I'll make sure that the land humans believe you've been assigned to assist her."

"Get someone else to do it, Ronan. You know I hate land."

"You're the guardian of the dolphins, Trey. Who else would you suggest I send?"

"Let Dane do it."

"Dane may have some of your dolphin skills, but he doesn't have the same scientific knowledge."

Shit. He knew he'd have to be the one to go. The safety and care of the dolphins was his responsibility. "I guess it'll be me, then. But I hate this and you damn well know it."

Ronan smiled. "I also know you don't want anyone else messing with your dolphins."

He had a point. "Fine. Get me a background and I'm outta here."

Ronan disappeared, leaving Trey to ponder the hundreds of reasons why he didn't want to go on land. None of which had to do with Dr. Jaz Quinlan. Impressive credentials, seemed to be genuinely concerned for the dolphins' welfare. But all he really knew about her read like a resume'. What he did know was she was bound by land, something he simply didn't understand.

The lure of land. What was it about living above the water that was so appealing? Leelia had found terra irresistible, and had chosen a new life as a land human rather than spending the rest of hers in Oceana.

With him.

Women. They never knew what they wanted. Trey knew, though. They wanted whatever they couldn't have and no matter what they got they were never satisfied.

"Jaci Burton's muse has taken a firm hold on her writing of late. This new world that she has created is so vividly portrayed that you feel yourself being led step by step through it. DOLPHIN'S PLAYGROUND offers some dramatic twists and turns that enhance the story and leaves you breathless when you've finished. Make sure you have the ice water handy as you read."
~ Claudia, Romance Junkies ~ 5 Ribbons

"Jaz and Trey are a powerful couple in Jaci Burton?s first take in the League of Seven Seas: Dolphin?s Playground. Ms. Burton blends knowledge, intrigue, love and passion splendidly in this story. The world of the dolphins and the knowledge the author penned is extraordinary. Not only did Trey and Jaz blow me away, I was enthralled with the information on these beautiful creatures that Ms. Burton added in this tale. I never knew the sea could be so sexy, but Trey, Ronan and Oceania are a sight to behold and could charm the bathing suit off anyone!"
~ Tracey West, Road to Romance

"Ms. Burton did a wonderful job weaving two worlds together in a seamless way. Trey is conflicted and prejudiced against land-humans, and Jaz is the perfect person to help him overcome that prejudice. This story was filled with humor and a sexiness that transcends land or water. I highly recommend this fun-filled erotic journey into the known world of marine science and, of course, into a new world of marine life."
~ Sara Sawyer, The Romance Studio ~ 4 1/2 Hearts