(previously titled Season of Light)
Book 1 of the Sons of Herne series
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Loving Lorayna could cost him his sacred power...
It
is the time of Yule, and Dominus, god of the sabbat, should never have had to
spend half the year nurturing the latest light bearer himself. Now, months of
visiting Lorayna, present only as a whisper, has sparked a yearning inside of
him that he cannot shake.
Lorayna
has felt herself drawn to the pagan path by a presence she has been unable to
resist. When she discovers her “holiday spirit” is in fact a mouthwateringly
sexy god, she’s ready for whatever sabbat ritual he chooses. To her
disappointment, his intentions are strictly hands-off.
Giving
up her light is not as easy as surrendering to his will, however. Dominus is
forced to break the rules and give into his urges before the Yule power
consumes her from within. The ripples of their passion will alter many sabbat
unions to come—and Dominus must defy his father, Herne, to follow his desires
and prove to Lorayna that she was not merely another light bearer.
Excerpt:
Dominus thought of his last visit to
Lorayna, how he had stood at her bedside, whispering ancient secrets while her
hair spilled across her pillow and her round curves beckoned. His male need flared
into a sharp ache at her beauty, and how he longed to plunge his fingers
through that silken hair, run his tongue over every sultry dip and swell on her
body. He never touched her. He could not. He had stayed overlong on that visit,
for he knew the time had come—a time he both longed for and resented. The time
when his visits to her, unwanted though they had begun, would be at an end. A
lump in his stomach punctuated the thought.
A figure passed by the sheer curtain
drawn halfway across the front window, and his pulse quickened.
Lorayna.
He heard the name dance through his
thoughts, and try though he might, he could not wave it away. He typically
preferred not to know the names of the women whose light he released. There was
little point in it, for he would not see nor know anything of the females once
his mission was complete. For their part, the women would know nothing of him,
either. The majority of humans were blissfully unaware that their world sat
tightly against a realm of immortals and magic, nor did they care to know just
how much their gods were still at work to this day, walking the woods, tending
to fields and lusty lasses, and generally keeping the balance of their worlds
at peace.
Laughter rose to his ears, and he
drew back instinctively behind the cover of trees. Humans would not see him
while he wore the veil charm, rare few, anyway, but best not to chance it. The
door to the cottage opened, and several people spilled out, happy and carefree
and followed by a waft of alcohol that was apparent to his keen, supernatural
senses. Then there she was, Lorayna, standing in the doorway with a wide smile
that tightened Dominus’s chest. She wore a pure white sweater, oversized and
yet clinging to her ripe figure, and while she chatted to her departing guests,
she tucked a silken strand of dark brown hair behind one ear. Blue and silver
bells tinkled on her earrings, jingling as she nodded and laughed. Her lips,
painted pink and glossy, caught his eye, and he found himself staring at how
they puckered and released with every syllable she spoke. Long, well-manicured
nails had been painted to match.
His cock throbbed in earnest,
already impatient with the guests who were lingering far too long at the
threshold for his tastes. He was eager for their time together, yearning to see
his months of attention to her physical and emotional well-being come to
fruition.
One of the males leaned close to
kiss Lorayna on the lips, and a swell of unpleasant heat rose in Dominus’s
stomach. She was not his to own, of course, and he had no cause for jealousy.
She would no doubt sleep with other men in the future, probably many others.
But she had kept herself pure since May Day, because she knew deep in her
subconscious that she was fated for no other until Dominus helped her birth the
shining light he saw inside her even now. The sun’s energy pulsed from within,
a bright, glowing force like a singular joy that was at the apex of its power.
He alone would bring back that light, coaxing it from her in an explosion of
climax. She would feel exquisite pleasure as she returned that energy to the
universe, followed by a temporary sense of loss. She would move forward,
however, unaware of her crucial role in the wheel’s turn of the coming
year.
The overly attentive male turned to
a man beside him and laid a suggestive kiss on him, complete with a sweep of
the tongue while squeezing his ass. Dominus relaxed his fists. So, the male had
other inclinations. Good.
“Try not to be a stranger,” the
other male said with a flourish. “Make a New Year’s resolution to come out into
the world more than once a month.”
“It’s not New Year’s yet,” she said.
“Before you know it.”
“I just can’t believe it’s already
over,” Dominus heard Lorayna saying to the two men who were now holding hands.
“I’ve felt such a holiday spirit this Yule.”
She glanced over the man’s shoulder,
looking straight at Dominus while those perfect nails raked strands of her hair
smooth. “Of course. It just feels like it tonight, is all.”
He held her gaze, fully aware that
she did not truly see him. At most, perhaps, she was aware of a by now familiar
presence. As her dark eyes penetrated him, however, he began to wonder.
About the Sons of Herne series:
The god Herne has appointed eight of
his most virile, headstrong sons as keepers of the pagan holidays. To honor
their sabbat, each must join with a mortal female in a ritual to maintain the
balance between worlds.
It is the year of The Thousand Seasons, and the Fates have secretly conspired to mark the end of an era by granting the gods one thing they lack--a true union of male and female that will last beyond the passion of a sabbat joining.
Herne’s sons will wrestle with the conflict between sacred duty and their own yearnings, a struggle that will not only challenge their beliefs, but may threaten the success of rituals that must be observed lest the mortal and immortal worlds collide in chaos.
It is the year of The Thousand Seasons, and the Fates have secretly conspired to mark the end of an era by granting the gods one thing they lack--a true union of male and female that will last beyond the passion of a sabbat joining.
Herne’s sons will wrestle with the conflict between sacred duty and their own yearnings, a struggle that will not only challenge their beliefs, but may threaten the success of rituals that must be observed lest the mortal and immortal worlds collide in chaos.
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