Entrusting the fate of the world, not to mention her and Isaiah’s life to a father she’s never met is a big leap of faith on Fallon’s part. But it’s a necessary risk. Ashton is the key to protecting Isaiah and keeping her out of Garrison’s clutches. He is also the only one who can tell her what she is, except what she learns is that she is from a world that is far more dangerous than anyone could possibly imagine.
As her powers grow out of control, Fallon must pick between her mortality and a legacy that does not include Isaiah. She must summon the courage to face a destiny that will test the boundaries of everything she has ever known. But most of all, she must protect Isaiah from the monster within herself and trust the man whose toxic blood runs through her veins.
Danger builds as power clashes between two evils, both seeking her to tip the scales to eternal darkness and suffering.
Can humanity rise to face an ancient calling to which Fallon is powerless to stop? Can she protect those she cares about, or will their blood forever stain her hands?
I was going to die in a park surrounded by little
kids. There was probably some irony there; I just couldn’t bring myself to
focus enough to find it. Truthfully, I probably couldn’t bring myself to find
my own nose at that moment. The prospect of dying had that effect on me.
The sun shone brightly, blanketing the grass in
a yellow glow that hurt the eyes. Only in British Columbia could it be winter and sunny enough to wear shorts and a
t-shirt. It was like the tropics of Canada. As final resting places went, it
wasn’t too shabby. It was better than the dank, urine soaked alley we’d nearly
died in last week, or the deodorant aisle at Walmart the week before that. It seemed like every week we found
new and more creative places to meet our demise and frankly, it was getting
tedious. There we were, adamant not to
die while Garrison’s goons were adamant to change our minds, and we were just
very stubborn people all around.
We were at a park, in the middle of December,
watching a kite flying contest. For someone who had survived some of the worst
winters in Canada, only in British Columbia was something like that possible in
a sundress without freezing your pants off. But even this boggling climate
mystery wasn’t enough to overshadow the fact that it was nearly noon, which
meant we were minutes away from meeting someone, a man … my father to be exact.
My real father, not Garrison who was
the genius behind me being cooked up in a lab like an omelet with animal DNA
and who knew what else.
Isaiah sat beside me, his confidence and
assurance a toasty blanket. It took a great deal of resistance not to give in
and curl up into his side. I knew he wouldn’t push me away. I knew he would
draw me in close. It was solely the fact that we were surrounded by screaming
children and their watchful parents that kept me at arm’s length. It was just a
hunch, but I was almost certain they would not take too kindly to me jumping
Isaiah and doing very non G-rated things to him in front of their offspring.
Parents were just weird like that. They didn’t understand that I didn’t have a
choice. Granted, even if I had, I would still jump the guy. He was freaking
delicious and I was still just a teenage girl with raging hormones and a thirst
for blood. You know, average.
There were often times when we were trapped in a
motel with nothing but a black and white TV for company and I would find myself
watching him, studying the powerful silhouette he made in the dim light. In the
last month since our escape from Garrison’s clutches, I had noticed a few interesting
things about my companion.
He never slouched. His body was perpetually
frozen in an unyielding rigid tension that seemed to never lessen. It was as
though his mind and body were continuously in attack mode. The first few nights
after our escape, I understood. I was on edge, too. Every little noise had me
bolting upright, heart wedged in my throat in panic. It was Isaiah who assured
me nothing was out there. The guy had the senses of … well, a wolf. But
eventually, I toned it down a notch. Isaiah, on the other hand, was hanging
onto that promise he made to Ashton as though it were a brick of gold; he was
going to protect me if it killed him. Sweet, right?
Wrong.
If someone could reach into my chest and tear
out my heart and turn it into a living, breathing person, Isaiah would be it.
He completed me. Most people had to live their whole lives wondering if they
would ever find their other half, their soul mate. Well, I didn’t. I shared a
soul with mine, literally. But there was nothing remotely romantic about it.
Our love was genetically engineered to make us
the ultimate weapon of mass destruction. So for all I knew, it wasn’t even
real. Because being a teenager and worrying about break outs, pit stains and
PMS wasn’t bad enough. I had a genuinely good reason to wonder if he really
loved me or not. Plus, I perpetually had a guy in my head.
Isaiah knew every one of my secrets without me
ever telling him. He knew what I was thinking and feeling before even I did. It
was a major pain in the ass. A girl needed her secrets, needed to be able to
ogle a guy coming out of the bathroom in nothing but a towel without him
getting a full wash of her not so G-rated thoughts. It didn’t help that the guy
could elicit dirty thoughts wearing a snowsuit. I may have been biased, but he
really was just that sexy, and all mine. As odd as it may sound, I wasn’t all
too pleased about the latter.
Guys like Isaiah didn’t pick girls like me in
the real world. I knew that had, we met under normal circumstances, he would
never have given me a second glance. He’d no doubt have his arm around some
leggy blonde with big … personalities and … ugh! I couldn’t even think about
it. The chick didn’t even exist and I wanted to throat punch her. That was how
low I had sunk on the spectrum of things.
I blamed Isaiah for driving myself crazy
wondering if he would just go away one day.
No. Wait. I blamed Terrell Garrison. He was the
reason we were in this mess. He was the reason I was on the run. He was also
the reason I would die if something happened to Isaiah, not just because I was
just that deeply gone over the guy, but because I needed Isaiah’s blood to
live. Seventeen years of human food, gone the minute I sunk my teeth into him.
So when I say the guy was delicious, I don’t just mean someone better call Calvin Klein and let them know their
underwear model was missing. The guy was literally delicious. His blood was
just euphoric. There were no words for the taste.
“Okay?” Isaiah took my hand from my lap.
I started to nod, because I sometimes forgot I
didn’t need to lie about how I felt. Mostly because lying was impossible when
he already knew my answers. Maybe it was because he knew how uncomfortable it
made me when he poked around in my head, but he always asked anyway. It was his
way of making an effort to give me a shred of normalcy in our bizarre
relationship.
“Nervous.” I moistened my lips and darted an
apprehensive glance over the sea of faces. “It’s kind of … open, here, isn’t
it?” There was so much movement. Too many people that could get hurt if
Garrison was there amongst them. “How would we know?” I said the last part out
loud, already knowing Isaiah had heard the rest without words.
“I would know.” He squeezed my hand. “He’s not
here.”
Even while I believed him, I still couldn’t
bring myself to relax, because there were bigger things to worry about than
just Garrison, although he was reason enough.
“You look beautiful.” He pressed a kiss to my
temple and stilled the restless picking I’d been doing at my clothes.
“What if he doesn’t like me?” I hated myself for
confessing such a vulnerable fear, but I couldn’t help it. “Maybe this wasn’t
such a good idea.”
“Fallon.” He nudged me lightly with his
shoulder.
I groaned, squeezing my eyes closed tight. He
was right. I was overthinking it. Whether my dad wanted anything to do with me
or not, I’d be fine. I was a survivor. It was the one thing my mom had spent my
whole life teaching me. I just had to keep moving. I could do that. Being on
the road was second nature to me. I didn’t need approval from a man I’d never
met.
“He’s here. Ashton,” he said quickly when I
bolted to my feet, gaze searching wildly for an oncoming attack.
“Oh!” Except, that was equally as bad. It was
just a different sort of attack.
I wiped the sweat off my palms onto my new
dress, hoping he wouldn’t want to shake hands. I’d taken a shower that morning
and had lathered on the vanilla scented deodorant, but it didn’t seem to be
doing its job; my armpits were sticky with sweat. I also prayed he wouldn’t
want to hug. Then, because freaking out was what I did best, I wondered about
my makeup. I didn’t usually wear any, but it wasn’t a usual day. What if it was
running down my face? Was my dress okay? Isaiah had sworn the soft, lavender
sundress with its white knitted sweater brought out the mix of colors in my
eyes, but he was a guy, what did he know about women’s clothing?
Still sitting on the bench, Isaiah chuckled.
“The sales lady agreed with me.”
“She could have been lying just to make a sale.”
I muttered, wringing my hands anxiously at my abdomen. “Will you get out of my
head? It’s a mess up there without your prodding.”
I knew it wasn’t his fault. I was the one who
had to calm down. My overflow of emotions was what sucked him into my head in
the first place. It didn’t help that I was being swept away in a storm of
emotions at that moment. There was no real stopping it.
He rose to his feet and took my shoulders in his
firm grip. “Then you need to calm down.”
I did take a deep breath, closed my eyes and
willed myself to remain as calm as possible. Yet, the second I opened my eyes,
I was pulled under by my uncertainties and fears. I didn’t know what I was
looking for and that made it worse. I had shared no resemblance with my mother
at all. For I knew, he could be six feet tall, black and a wrestler.
Isaiah snorted a laugh. “He’s not.” He leaned
into me and brushed the side of my head with a kiss. He’d been doing that a lot
that morning, soothing me with his touches and kisses. It was his way of
reminding me that I wasn’t alone. “You have his eyes and the color of his
hair.”
As though for emphasis, he wrapped a strand of
my unbound hair around his finger and gave a playful tug that made me laugh. He
smiled and I felt my heart stutter in my chest.
The worry took a momentary backseat as I fell
into his beautiful eyes, eyes so blue they could have been strips of raw
electricity. They were surrounded by lashes that I would have killed for, long,
thick and dark. They matched the perfect shade of ebony tumbling over his
prominent brow and curling behind his ears. Glossy strands had escaped the band
at the base of his skull and fluttered temptingly in the breeze. I was always
so fascinated by his hair. Maybe because he rarely ever took it down from its
confinement, but I always had an inexplicable urge to tear the band away and
replace it with my fingers.
I reached for him and touched the side of his
rugged face in a feather light caress from temple to jaw. I caught a strand and
nimbly tucked it behind his ear.
“How do you do that?” I murmured, turning my
body to his and being rewarded by the feel of his hands going to my waist.
His head bent to the side. “What’s that?”
“Make me feel not so crazy.”
His eyes glittered as his lips pulled into a
heart melting smile. “Maybe because you were never crazy to begin with.” He
touched his brow to mine and I was drawn into his scent of toothpaste, soap,
rain and leather. “Or maybe we’re both crazy.”
I became painfully of his lips hovering
dangerously close to mine and his hands burning through the fabric of my dress.
The rest of the world faded as the rush of his blood racing through his veins
roared in my ears, calling to me, begging me to do what I swore I wouldn’t. The
gums above my canines began to itch deliciously. My fingers tightened in the
fabric of his shirt. My lips parted, my breathing ragged even to my own ears.
“Isaiah…”
His gaze sharpened. They became dark slits of
hunger I recognized all too well. His fingers gouged ten holes into my side as
he tightened his grip on me. In a single yank, I was crushed into the shelter
of his chest. His heart tattooed a desperate beat against mine. I trembled. My
body ached in places I could do nothing about. I felt his fingers tangle into
my hair to cup the base of my skull.
His breath burned the side of my face, coming
out gruff when he growled into my ear, “I told you to feed.”
He had … insistently for a month.
“You know we can’t.” My hands trembled and I was
sure I was cutting holes into his shirt with my nails and causing irreparable
damage to the fabric, but I couldn’t let him go. “We agreed—”
His eyes narrowed, reflecting his anger and
frustration. “I never agreed to anything.”
What we were doing was playing with fire and
toying with things that neither of us fully understood. What we did know was
that our need for each other, our insatiable hunger was the thing that would
burn the world to the ground. The fire between us was as wild and dangerous as
it was beautiful. The world may not have wanted to burn in its glorious
embrace, but I did. I wanted nothing else. Succumbing to the untamed temptation
was vastly more alluring than the alternative, which was the perpetual distance
I had to put between us.
“There’s
still time,” he murmured directly into my mind. “You’ll feel better once you’ve eaten.”
Screw
the world, this is what you want! A very persistent part
of me insisted and it wasn’t wrong. I did want this.
It wasn’t fair. Being strong and resisting
wasn’t quite as simple when I was being prodded from all sides.
He touched the side of my face, tracing the
contours of my cheek with his finger and coaxing me to nuzzle his palm. My eyes
closed as I leaned into him.
There were insane moments when I saw no reason
to stop, but then commonsense always prevailed and I forced myself to step
back. Lately, those lucid moments were becoming few and far between.
“I hope I’m not interrupting.” And just like
that, the calm within me erupted.
I was slammed with an avalanche of panic and
dread that had my heart jumping into my throat. Sweat returned to my palms and
I was left with no way to wipe them without giving away how nervous I was.
“Ashton!”
Isaiah stepped forward, hand extended to the
other man. I heard the slap of palms and happily shared murmurs. I let it all
wash over me, biding my time before facing the man responsible for bringing me
into the world—more or less.
He was handsome, all chiseled features,
twinkling eyes and blinding smiles. He stood brushing six feet, slender with a
head full of salt and pepper hair and eyes the same turquoise-blue with flakes
of green, gray and brown as mine. He wore casual clothes; black slacks and a
white dress shirt. There was nothing intimidating about him, or so I thought
until he finally turned those eyes on me, and I froze like a deer caught in the
headlights of a semi.
“Fallon.” His smile was soft, sad, but blazing
with a light only my mother had ever worn when looking at me—love. “You’ve
grown.”
It was a lame joke, yet it was kind of funny.
The last time he’d seen me, I’d been four so, yeah, I had grown since then.
“Yeah…” I voice hitched embarrassingly.
As tense, awkward moments went, it was the
worst. My mind remained stubbornly blank, probably giving me an air of idiocy.
I didn’t know what to do with my hands; they suddenly seemed so big and dumb
hanging at my sides uselessly and I couldn’t stop wondering if I was slouching.
“How are you?” he asked.
I did that stupid shoulder jerk thing. It was a
toss between a shrug and a nervous twitch. “Okay. And you are? Okay, I mean.
Are you okay?” I grimaced at my own rambling. “How are you?”
His lips curled in the faintest smile.
“Nervous.” It was comforting how easily he said it. It was also really good to
know I wasn’t the only one. “I’ve been waiting for this moment a very long
time.”
He moved then. It was quick, or maybe I blinked,
but he was suddenly in front of me and I was engulfed in a fierce embrace so
tight I almost couldn’t breathe. I didn’t complain. It wasn’t tight enough. He
smelled like a dad, or what I always imagined a dad would smell like—warm,
loving and strong.
“I’ve missed you,” he murmured vehemently into
my temple.
“I missed you, too,” I replied, still grappling
with the knowledge that I had a dad, a dad I was told was dead my whole life. A
dad who wanted me.
He pushed me back to arm’s length and stared
down at me, his eyes unnaturally large and bright. Mom used to get that look
during romance movies, just before she started crying. But nothing about Ashton
suggested he was a closet romance crier. No, he was impenetrable, resolute …
sturdy. Still, his eyes shone down at me like liquid pools. My own were filmy.
He smiled, giving my shoulders a squeeze. “Call
me Ashton, unless you prefer Dad or Ash. Whatever is easier for you.” He
paused, before adding, “You must have a million questions.”
My smile quivered. “Yeah.”
He gave my shoulders another squeeze. “Let me
take you home. You must be starving.”
Home … I’d never had one of those before. I grew
up in motel rooms on greasy, cardboard food and plastic cups. I lived out of a
single duffle bag, out of the back of my mom’s Impala. The closest thing I’d
ever come to healthy living was the tomatoes and lettuce on my burger and
remembering not to fall asleep against the car window while the sun was highest
in the sky. But I didn’t eat food anymore. At least, I hadn’t in almost a
month.
“Actually, there are a few things we need to
tell you first.” Isaiah took a step forward.
Ashton glanced from me to Isaiah, curiosity
bright in his eyes. He straightened, removing his hands from my shoulders,
leaving a cold sensation behind. “Is here all right?”
Isaiah glanced around at the people rushing
around us. “Perhaps somewhere else?”
Ashton nodded, all business now. He surveyed the
park, the movement quick, but I knew it was thorough. He didn’t seem like the
sort to leave anything half-assed. “There is a café down the block. It’s
usually very quiet around this time and the staff doesn’t meddle.”
I learned quickly what that meant. As soon as we
walked into the tiny corner café, the staff vanished. Not into thin air, but
they got one head nod from Ashton and walked a straight line into the back
room, closing the door behind them.
“I own the building,” Ashton said when he caught
me staring in awe.
“I guess being a doctor pays really well, huh?”
I mused.
“Doctor?” Ashton peered over his shoulder at me,
his features perplexed.
I looked towards Isaiah, waiting for him to
explain, because he’d been the one to tell me my father was a doctor. But he
was equally puzzled by Ashton’s confusion.
“Oh!” Ashton seemed to realize something. He
nodded. “Yes. Doctor.” He closed and locked the glass door behind us. He turned
and motioned towards the fifteen or so empty tables around the place. “Why
don’t we talk?”
After a curious glance between me and Isaiah, we
took the seat furthest from the wall of windows, right in the corner so we had
a clear view of the whole café, including the front door.
“You are a doctor, right?” I pressed. “I mean,
that’s how you met Garrison, isn’t it?”
He cleared his throat and I could tell right
away I wasn’t going to like what he was about to tell me.
“I’m not a doctor,” he said slowly, looking from
me to Isaiah. “That was what I'd told your mother I was when we first met.”
“So what are you then?” This was from Isaiah,
who looked even more betrayed by the confession than I felt.
Ashton lowered his gaze to the tabletop. “I’m
many things,” he began slowly.
“But all these years…” Isaiah shook his head.
“You told me—”
“I know.” Ashton looked him square in the face.
“I will explain everything in due time, Isaiah. For now, I think we have more
important things to discuss.” He cast me a pointed glance.
The muscles in Isaiah’s jaw flexed, but he
reined in the frustration I could feel pouring off him into me. I had to
restrain the urge to reach for his hand.
“Garrison has become more persistent in his hunt
for Fallon,” Isaiah mumbled, unable to conceal the grudge in his tone. “We can
hardly go a day without an attack. Whoever his tracker is, they’re very powerful.
I haven’t been able to sense them anywhere near us, yet they always seem to
know where we are.”
Ashton nodded as though this made sense. “My
sources have informed me of a great surge in numbers this last few weeks.
Terrell has found a new source of power from somewhere and he’s not wasting any
time using it. I think it’s only a matter of time before his forces close in on
you.”
“Are you a spy?” I blurted.
Ashton blinked. Then he broke into a deep rumble
of laugh. “No, but I make it my business
to keep feelers in all things noteworthy, and Terrell has particular place in
my interests.”
“Isaiah tells me you’ve been rescuing the
children Garrison—”
“He’d be both wrong and right,” Ashton
interrupted. “I do my best to rescue those I can, but they aren’t as many
children as there once had been. There are a few, but those remaining, Terrell
guards very closely. I haven’t rescued anyone
in nearly a year.”
“If not children, then what—”
Ashton put his hand up, stopping my tumble of
questions. “Let’s talk about all that later. Right now, I want to hear your
news.”
I wanted to press. I still had so many
questions. But he was right. We could talk about those things later. We had,
after all, all the time in the world.
“I told you about our run in with Maia and
Yuri,” Isaiah began.
Ashton nodded. “Yes, how they found Fallon.
Terrell no doubt sent them out of desperation. Maia is not someone Terrell
would send if the situation hadn’t gotten out of hand. She’s the most evil
creature I have ever encountered and that is saying quite a bit.”
Isaiah nodded. “We managed to evade him for a
while, before we were captured. We were taken to Garrison’s home just north of
Whistler. I don’t know the exact location, but I can find it if I tried.”
Ashton shook his head. “That won’t be necessary.
I’ve known for a while where he calls home. However, had I known you were
there, I would have come to get you myself.”
“Contact was impossible,” Isaiah replied. “We
were heavily guarded, right until the end when we managed to escape.”
“And did he ever tell you what his plans were?”
Ashton wondered.
I shook my head before Isaiah could tell him
otherwise. Ashton may have been my father, the man whose blood ran through my
veins, but he’d also been partners with Garrison once upon a time and I was too
paranoid to trust anyone. I trusted people who lied even less. Whether or not
he’d ever been a doctor was a moot point. It was him lying about it that only
increased my distrust. Plus I hadn’t forgotten Mom’s last warnings to me not to
trust Ashton.
Isaiah must have sensed my need not to share the
fact that we were potential weapons of mass destruction, because he didn’t
bring it up. Instead, he veered the topic back to our escape.
“Fallon saved
my life.” Isaiah cast me a level glance as though daring me to contradict his
claim.
He was wrong. I hadn’t saved his life. He may
have gotten shot, but with his accelerated healing, he hadn’t been in any real
danger.
“Well, you did what you had to,” Ashton said at
once, voice unwavering. “Had it not been them, it would have been you.”
Was that how murderers looked themselves in the
mirror? Justification? How did one justify taking a life?
“After we escaped, we laid low for a couple of
weeks and tried to regroup before we contacted you,” Isaiah finished at last.
By laid
low, he meant me vehemently dragging my feet on the whole situation and him
needing a month to convince me that it was time I met my father.
Despite my need for answer and safety, I could
never shake the uncertainty the idea of meeting Ashton always provoked. But I
was really tired of running. I was tired of not having options. I was tired of
being tired. Plus, Isaiah was so adamant that Ashton was the good guy. Maybe he
was right.
Ashton, who had been listening attentively to
Isaiah, beamed. “Remarkable!” he said, shaking his head. “Absolutely
remarkable. I always knew Terrell was unstable, but this proves that his lunacy
goes much deeper than face value.”
You
think? I wanted to say. His brilliant observation was,
oh, seventeen years too late.
“There’s more,” Isaiah murmured, hesitant.
“Garrison’s still alive and out for blood.”
Ashton nodded. “You’ll be safe at Luxuria. I
made the mistake of letting you fend for
yourself once. I won’t—”
“I didn’t fend for myself!” My tone came out
sharper than I’d intended. “I had Mom and we were doing fine until this crap
happened.”
Ashton visibly winced. “Yes, of course. I
apologize.” He lowered his head. “I should have done more to protect you both
and for that, I am eternally guilt ridden. I failed you.”
“You couldn’t have known,” I murmured.
He wouldn’t meet my eye. “Perhaps.” He placed a
gentle hand on mine. “I can’t replace what you had with your mother, Fallon,
but I promise that I will protect you in every way that I can. You’re safe
now.”
It was daunting to accept. It seemed too easy,
and even as a part of me salivated at the possibility of being wholly and truly
in the clear. Yet the part of me that had seen and done too much, refused to
believe it. Also, I knew firsthand what Garrison was capable of. I knew that he
would never give up looking for me. I was too valuable. But my options were
slim. My life was in danger and because of me, Isaiah was in danger. In order
to keep him safe, I had to trust Ashton. I had to believe that he meant what he
said about keeping us away from Garrison.
The shriek of Isaiah’s chair sliding viciously
across the smooth laminate sent my heart scuttling up into my throat even
before he shouted, “We need to go!” and grabbed my arm.
I was hauled to my feet and dragged behind him.
Ashton was up and out of his seat with much less
haste. He twisted his body to the window even as his hand went around behind
him. The movement was so quick, so fluid like he’d done it a million times, a
frightening thought when, a second later, he was cradling a sleek, black
handgun. It was almost reassuring to know my father packed heat like some mafia
guy, if not a bit daunting. But even that wasn’t as blood chilling as the three
familiar silhouettes making their way with great ease across the street in the
direction of the cafe.
“Take her through the back.” Ashton passed
Isaiah the gun, who took it and seamlessly slipped it into the waistband of his
jeans. “I’ll deal with them.”
“Wait!” I lunged after him when he made for the
door, ignoring Isaiah’s grip on me when I grabbed Ashton’s arm. “You can’t go
out there without your gun! You have no idea—”
Ashton smiled calmly at me. It was so
off-putting considering the situation that I dropped my hand. “Don’t worry
about me, dearest. I don’t need a weapon.”
Then, with a wink that only sealed my theory
that my dad was suicidal, he strolled out of the café to meet the Shadow
Brothers.
REVIEW
This book blew me away. It was nothing like what I was
expecting, and with each new twist and turn the story became darker and even more
terrifying. I was fully immersed in the story as Fallon uncovered her heritage,
a complex web of lies and secrets, layer upon layer of surprising revelations
that saw Fallon go from being a scientific experiment, to a powerful being with
a destiny that could bring about the end of the world. It also showed that
there were far more frightening things in this world than Garrison; although
his level of evilness came pretty close to some of the strange creatures Fallon
came into contact with.
I fell even more in love with Isaiah. He was so protective
over Fallon, even when they realized just how powerful she was, and he was cast
off as a mere human with a few enhancements, that protective instinct was still
there. When Archer stepped into the
picture I automatically thought “Uh-oh, love triangle” and my hackles were
raised in Isaiah’s defense, but Archer seemed to be on his own buzz most of the
time. I did get the feeling that there was more to his presence and I wasn’t
that surprised when Khrane shed some light on that particular issue.
This book was filled with intrigue, romance, action, and
even horror. There was a great mix of weird, fantastical creatures; some quite normal, others horrific - and yes, I include Lally in the latter category because she was just creepy!! I was thrilled with the twist Phoenix put on the sins and how they
came to be. It was fresh and exciting. This is a definite must read for all PNR
and fantasy lovers.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
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