It’s easy to fall in love. Destiny requires tooth and claw.
Curses are designed to be cruel, but the one afflicting Jordan and his brothers is almost beyond bearing. A dragon born by blood magic, he is an immortal trapped in human form, with only one hope of finding his eternal mate. He must bite her—and pray she lives.
One dark night, he senses the wounded heartbeat of a woman in the shadows, begging him to end her life. Ever the gentleman, he chivalrously obliges her wish. Only to discover three days later that she lives. And has married another.
Celeste always dreamed of marrying for love, but the nightmare of living in her father’s home drives her to wed the Duke of Hudson. Yet on her wedding eve, she is compelled to follow a mysterious man who professes to know her secret. A man with curious blue scales on his muscular arms—whose shadowed eyes reflect a dangerous mix of destiny and desire…
Warning: This novel contains explicit sex, sex in water, four super-hot dragon brothers, and a curse born from magical power that has left them wondering who they are all their lives.
Title: Waterfall
A Dragon’s Fate Novella, Book 1
Author: Lacy Danes
Genre: Romance, Alternate Worlds, Paranormal, Steamy/Erotic
Publisher: Samhain Publishing
Number of pages: 138
Word Count: 38K
Cover Artist: Kanaza
Add it on Goodreads
Purchase from Amazon
Here's an excerpt to enjoy:
Carefully stepping around scattered, fractured boards, trunks and lengths of tangled rope, Jordan and Ferrous neared the last grouping of rocks at the trees’ edge. Jordan sighed. About time.
A faint heartbeat crawled out of the obscure shadows, stalked up his spine. Something lived from this bloody mess. Though barely.
Jordan stilled.
Ferrous turned to the left. “I feel it too.”
Jordan followed.
On the opposite side of the rocks, jagged boards bumped, clattering against a boulder. A mass of tangled human remains bobbed and swayed with each lap of water against the shore.
From this mess, a heartbeat cried. Jordan closed his eyes and sighed as his stomach flipped. He would find it. He stepped into the water amid the carnage and shuddered. I must move as hastily as possible. I can do this. The sound of life grasped him as if a hand itself clasped his flesh. He flinched, then turned to the left.
An arm’s length away, half in the water, lay a woman. Her limbs were twisted and broken, as if made of nothing more than weeds. A man’s head, severed from the body it had once belonged to, floated close to her hand. Jordan’s heart pinched, and the scales on his elbows prickled anew.
No one deserved to be half alive after experiencing a tragedy such as this. He stepped up next to her, knocking the human debris away with his boot. He leaned down and wrapped one hand about her slim, bare shoulders. The other he slid beneath her knees, fisting up a handful of her full skirts. She should have drowned in such a garment. He lifted her, pulling her body up against his.
She hung like a sack of barley in his grasp. Her long, wet skirts and hair trailed cold water in a stream, trickling over the rocks and babbling down into his boots. He turned and stumbled along the slag toward the trees.
Ferrous turned after him. “She won’t live, Jordan.” He strode behind him. “Leave her.”
Her clothing, laden with seawater, soaked his coat in blood. Was it hers or the rotting blood of the pool in which she had lain? He shook his head. Don’t think about the stench. He grimaced. Think about her.
Ferrous was right. She would never live.
He fell to his knees and laid her on the high grass that bordered the trees. Her dress was that of an aristocrat, finely tailored with small pearls and embroidery now torn open down to her flesh in several places. Her hair had been swept up with the sun, golden rays that now hid beneath a cloud of red death. “I will end her suffering.” Yes, that was the correct thing to do.
“For bloody sake, Jordan. You are not to indulge unless you have an inkling she may be the one. There are no exceptions to our rules. Look what happens to Ilmir when he breaks one. Who knows what calamity awaits us in London.”
Jordan’s jaw clenched, and he narrowed his eyes, refusing to look at Ferrous, who stood behind him. “This is different, and you damn well know it. I am not Ilmir, and she is not a woman I am courting. She is dying.”
“Being chivalrous?” Ferrous threw up his hands, grumbled and walked through the trees back toward the shore. “Make haste. I wish to make this hellish scene vanish this hellish scene and be to London to deal with Ilmir.”
Did Ferrous truly think he wanted to do this? To kill another woman was the last thing he wished. Twenty years had passed… Jordan inhaled a deep breath and blew it out between tense lips. He ran his fingers down her pale cheek and around her chin, tilting her face toward his. A slender nose, full, angelic lips, and noble cheekbones. A beauty. “To a better afterlife, dear.”
He raised her chin, exposing her long, graceful neck and faintly beating pulse. Another death…
Dash it. He stared unblinking at the slight flutter of her blood beneath her skin. Relax, Jordan. He closed his eyes and exhaled. All will be well.
Prickling pain clawed through the roof of his mouth as his two pointed teeth extended into thin slivers of bone. He stared down at her neck. She had been floating in blood and seawater. He spit on her neck, twice. His saliva glimmered as it slid down her throat to the grass below. There, that should wash away the dirt she had stewed in. Or would it? His throat tightened. Don’t lick her. Be done with it.
He leaned in and pressed his teeth to her vein. His mouth opened, saliva pooled heavily, and his tongue thickened. The pouches by his back teeth filled with poisonous blood, forcing his jaw still wider. He inhaled a jagged breath. His heart leapt and pounded, vibrating through his entire being…
Bite her, Jordan. Be done with it. Bite her.
Her faint pulse bumped against his teeth, willing him to take her as his mate. Mate? Well, that urge was pointless. She would pass just as swiftly as the others. He rolled his lip back and hissed, then pressed, slicing through her soft, salty outer skin and into her tepid blood flowing below.
She didn’t flinch.
This was the first time he had taken a woman when he was not passionately joined with her. Odder yet not to have her scream. To have her do nothing but lie on the wilted grass.
He swallowed. Dirt be damned, he needed to taste her and know that one essence of the life he now took. He fluttered his tongue on her smooth skin. Warm, salty blood slid thickly down his tongue. Damn. His muscles quivered as his poisonous blood streamed from his pouches and down his teeth, twisting into her veins. His cock pressed painfully hard against his thigh.
The task was done. There would be no more. He would not take his pleasure in her. He would not know the feel of her flesh against his. He would never know her favorite color. This woman, like all the others who had come before, was not meant to be his. Enough!
He growledand opened his mouth wide. Her soft flesh slipped from his fangs. He pulled his head back, and their mixed blood trailed in streams down her neck and dress. His vision shifted and popped. Adrenaline mixed with power bubbled through his veins. This…this, he had missed.
This was what he was meant to be. His full elemental power at a glimpse. He tossed his hair back and then growled a dragon’s cry up to where the moon should hang in a radiant, colored vision. Yet only the ebony fog resided tonight. There was no moon to lighten this scene. His vision rippled with detailed clarity. Ah. Indeed. This was the power that years of existence without his mate had diminished. He wanted this power back. It had been too long. In a burst of speckled light, everything changed back to somber mist. Bloody hell. His throat closed off, and his eyes burned. No! He swallowed hard, and his shoulders sagged. This was a tease. A temptation.
He closed his eyes and shook his head. He would never know more of what the Zir were than this… Death and a glimpse of the exhilarating power they were destined to have.
He inhaled and smelled her metallic, sweet blood on his lips. His tongue traced his teeth and upper lip, gathering up the enslaving essence. Sweet orange blossoms and candied cherries. His made-up version of what she should taste like. Remember her. His jaw trembled as hot blood pounded through him to his groin. His soul wanted more of her. To mate. To love. To live a lifetime of companionship.
He clenched his teeth, and his fangs pierced his lower lip. You have done enough to end her suffering. Quite enough. Let her be. He opened his eyes once more.
A shadow shaped as Ferrous stood head down and arms straight out in the air at the rocks’ edge. “Make haste. I wait no more.”
Jordan placed her head softly back on the grass. “Will scant be a moment more of pain, beauty.” He trailed his hand down her broken arm to a heavy, thick bracelet looping her wrist. He unclasped the chain and slowly rubbed the metal between his fingers. His token of her death. He tucked the jewelry in his inner coat pocket, then rose to his full height. Turning to his left, he skulked into the inky woods.
About the Author :
Lacy Danes made a New Year's resolution to write a hot, historical romance.
A year and a half later, she achieved her goal. She lives in Portland, Oregon, where besides writing she enjoys playing cards, chasing her kids around, and savoring a great martini with the man of her dreams all while watching the world go by.
Visit Lacy at her Website, Twitter page, or on Facebook.
My Thoughts:
A Waterfall could come in handy after reading such Hot Stuff! Wow! Adult eyes only for this book.
When I first read the blurb, it sounded like something that I would like. I didn't realize that it was set in 17th century London as I usually stay away from historical type books. I did enjoy it but I would have liked it much more if it was set in the modern day. It's just me. There are a lot of people who prefer historicals. No matter how many I read or how hard I try I just don't care for them.
There was a good bit of action, some mystery, romance, and steamy scenes in the plot. Did I forget to mention the four dragon brothers? ;-) I felt like the story was rushed in some places especially at the end.
I really liked the premise and my attention stayed on the book until I was finished.
I would recommend this to anyone who likes their steamy paranormal books with a historical feel to them.
I received a copy of this book from Bewitching Book Tours in exchange for my honest opinion.
Do you prefer modern day or historical settings?
a Rafflecopter giveaway
I'd love to know what you're thinking. Please leave a comment!
+JMJ+
ReplyDeleteI find modern day settings easier to relate to, too, but I love it when I read a Historical novel that feels properly, for lack of a better term, foreign. "The past is a foreign country," said L.P. Hartley--and I agree with him! There are few things I have as little patience for as Historicals whose characters seem to be my contemporaries dressed up in period costumes.
When it comes to Paranormals, I have similar issues when supposedly immortal characters act as immaturely as someone who is "only" thirtysomething years old but I like Kresley Cole's explanation that immortals want to blend in with humans so much that they adopt the mannerisms of every new generation, as necessary.
I agree with L.P. Hartley as well. :-)
DeleteHistoricals definitely feel foreign to me!
I can deal with characters having odd or old mannerisms especially when they are from paranormal books. Sometimes I even like those characters the best!
I prefer modern day settings (I'm a bit of a feminist, so not always a fan of how women are treated in historical settings). Plus, times have drastically changed, so it's fun yet odd getting into the past through a historical. Plus, if the author doesn't do the research but just puts the book in a different era for setting, it's highly annoying.
ReplyDeleteThough, I will still read historical books, especially if they're a different take on history (kind of like how the movie Inglorious Basterds rewrote the ending of World War II).
Well I'm sorry to say that you guys can have all of the Historical type books.
DeleteIf it has a historical setting like Waterfall, then it is not for me, no matter how good the book is. :-(
I don't care for it whether it is done right or not.
I don't mind either. I read a lot of paranormal book sent in the modern time because it's the majority i think but i also like those set in the past if the setting is clear and respected.
ReplyDeleteI think that if sometime simmortals act like teenager if also because they are hurting.... wisdom can become with age but we can also see a lot of wisdom in young child because they have suffered and in a way their gained this before the time. Now imagine it happen but you still leave hundred of years wouldn'tyou want to find the innocence that was tolen from you? don't you think you could have a lot of anger hifdden in you can could make you act more immpetiously and immature ( we are doing it when we are angry why not them too?)
The characters I can handle regardless. I just don't get into the whole ton, Duke, Duchess, Earl, etc....., these type of things and or settings like that. So not for me.
DeleteI guess I'm just a modern girl. I never really liked history in school either.lol!
I really prefer either, both are great
ReplyDeleteI like modern day I think I read too much historical but I dont dislike it.
ReplyDeleteI wish I liked it. :-)
DeleteI read it all :) Kind of depends on my mood. Historicals are my fave but I don't care for the western romance books.
ReplyDeleteLori
Ha! I can read Westerns but I just can't relate to Historicals.
DeleteI do enjoy historical but for some reason most of the paranormal I read are contemporary.
ReplyDeletedebby236 at gmail dot com
I am glad that most of the paranormals seem to be contemporary! :-)
DeleteI prefer either...but I like it when paranormals are contemporary :)
ReplyDeleteAshley A
ash_app at hotmail dot com
I like my paranormals contemporary too!
DeleteI love both modern day and historical settings.
ReplyDeleteThat seems to be the general consensus! I'm the odd woman out. :-)
DeleteI like both, historical if I get to learn something about the era, modern otherwise.
ReplyDeleteI like both modern and historical fictions. But historical fictions can be tricky, if not done properly it will ruin the entire picture. For example I read one historical fiction that had information in it from two different time periods so it was confusing or when the language dialogue is blurred with modern dialogue.
ReplyDeleteModern is always good because it is easier to read.
It's modern for me all the way!
DeleteOH WOW, I totally need to get this book... Just the info at the top of this page has me wanting more. Love the cover as well. Covers are a big deal to me ;)
ReplyDeleteAs for modern or historical, I read both. I have many moods and the multitude of settings and genres out there allow me to satisfy all of them.
I have many moods and genres too but nyway you play it I can't get into historicals. :-(
Delete