Blood Chained
by Eden Ashley
Publication Date: November 18th, 2014
Genres: Paranormal Romance, Young Adult
Synopsis:
Sometimes great evil is
necessary to keep what you love most.
After centuries on the run, Rhane can avoid justice no longer. Primes have
called him home and now he must finally answer for the sins of his past. But the
situation in Rhane’s homeland is far worse than anyone could have imagined, and
the judgment Rhane faces is a brutal one. Even relying on the strength of the
immortal Banewolf, the man he has become may not survive.
Kali and the other kin work tirelessly to secure Rhane’s freedom, but many
obstacles stand in their way. Wesley offers a solution that hinges upon resuming
a dangerous search for the Siren’s Heart. Trusting him, she and the kin set out
once again to find the elusive artifact, believing Rhane and Warren’s freedom
can be bartered in exchange for the statue. But other creatures are searching
for the Heart. And with greater resources and a head start, their enemies may
reach it first.
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Excerpt from Blood Chained
The
Beginning…
The sound of her
screams reached him as he neared the dorm. Pausing at the threshold, the man
stepped inside. Death and the wind were at his back. Dozens of hollow-eyed
students turned to observe his presence. Fear had twisted their youthful faces
into horrific masks. A few of them wept. Others clung together as another
scream echoed into the night. The man flinched. Then he steeled himself against
all emotion. His kind was supposed to feel nothing.
He made his way
through the crowd, students eagerly shuffling aside to let him pass. It was as
if somehow they sensed in him the power to end her suffering. When a young man
dressed only in boxers and a lettered shirt stepped forward from a cluster of
solemn dorm mates, the man stopped. He recognized the boy.
“You are
William. You are the one who called.”
“Yes, sir,” the
young man said while nodding. His eyes were wide and frightened as he pointed
ahead to a closed door painted prison grey. “She’s in there, sir.”
The man looked
at the door, and then back at the boy. “Is she alone?”
William’s
shoulders slumped with embarrassment. “I tried to stay with her but…” his voice
trailed, dropping to a hoarse whisper. “She looks bad, sir. She wouldn’t stop
screaming for me to get out. I got scared. I’m sorry.”
“It’s alright,
son. You have done well.” The man laid a hand on the boy’s shoulder with an
encouraging smile that reflected none of the sadness he felt. “She’s going to
be okay.”
But her cries
were becoming more tormented by the second. He quickly continued down the hall
to the grey door. Behind it, he found her all alone. Her thin, pale body was
curled on a beaten sofa in the center of the room. She was drenched in sweat.
Dark hair plastered against her face, framing a beautiful canvas contorted with
anguish. He placed a hand gently on her forehead.
Her eyes
fluttered open. “Daddy?”
“I’m here,
sweetheart. Everything is fine now.”
Sobbing in
relief even as another surge of agony ransacked her strength, she gritted her
teeth. “It hurts.”
Squeezing her
hand, he spoke in a voice thick with regret. “I know. I’m sorry. Letting you
come here was a mistake. I’ve waited too long.”
She was lost in
the pain and didn’t seem to hear him. “I see horrible things. I did horrible
things. There was so much blood.”
It hurt him
terribly to see her in such distress. No matter what the others said, this girl
had truly been his daughter. But right now, his love for her could not matter.
He had a job to do. There were things he needed to know. There were questions
he had to ask.
“What do you
see?”
“Bodies, hundreds of bodies littering the
ground…” The words broke off as she rolled with another wave of misery.
“They’re burned…old and young, women and children.” She sobbed again. “I think
I burned them.”
“I’m going to give
you something to stop the pain. It will help you sleep.”
“Please hurry,
Daddy. Make it stop.” Her body shuddered. “I can’t take any more of this.”
She lifted her
head, giving him a good look at her face. Surging veins had crept like black
spiders from the corners of her eyes, transforming the surrounding skin into
dark pools. She was deteriorating rapidly. If the process wasn’t slowed, the
human form would soon be lost. He kicked himself for making such a foolish
mistake, for letting emotion get in the way of duty. It could have jeopardized
everything. He hurried into the kitchen and returned a few minutes later
carrying a red mug filled with steaming liquid. “Can you sit up?” She nodded
and struggled upright. She took the mug. “Drink all of it,” he said and helped
steady her hands.
The liquid
smelled awful. But after the first sip, her violent trembles began to subside.
She downed the rest without hesitation, draining the mug until the last drop
was gone. The grey tint that had taken over receded as the color of her skin
returned to normal. The girl peered at her hands. They no longer shook.
An uncertain
smile spread across her face. “It’s over.”
He shook his
head. “No. We must start over,” he said sadly.
“I don’t
understand.”
He stood from
the couch and held out a hand. “Come with me.”
“What?” She
yawned sleepily. Everything about her was like a normal teenager again. “Dad, I
can’t. I have finals tomorrow.”
“Come with me,”
he repeated.
She took his
hand and let the empty mug fall to the couch. He led her out into the hall
where everyone waited anxiously, some visibly grateful to see the young woman
leave. Averting her gaze to the floor, she avoided their eyes. “Everyone’s
staring,” she muttered.
“They were
worried about you.” He reached back and drew the girl forward to his side,
planting a kiss atop her hair. As they reached the front door, he saw her try
to stifle another yawn. Even the crisp night air couldn’t shake the veil of
drowsiness that would lower over her mind.
“Dad, I’m really
tired.”
“You can sleep
on the way.” He smiled again. To him, the reassurance felt forced and painful
because on the inside, his heart was breaking. He hoped his daughter wouldn’t
know it.
Wrapping her
arms about him, she hugged him tightly and buried her head into his shirt like
she had when she was little. On this night, he couldn’t hug her back. Afraid
that if he did, he wouldn’t be able to let go. What he had to do was cruel. He
wished he didn’t have to. To have so much power and still be powerless was a
wretched existence.
#
It was daylight
when she awoke. The car wasn’t moving and the girl was alone inside. She
recognized nothing of the surroundings, had no idea how far her father had
driven. It wasn’t unusual for him to whisk her away on a spur-of-the-moment weekend
getaway to the beach. Her father’s spontaneity was one of the things she loved
most about him. But this wasn’t the beach. And the girl was positive she’d
mentioned to him that she had a final to take—she glanced at her watch—in three
hours. Sighing, she opened the door and slid out of the car. The sound of a
child’s laughter came drifting through the trees. Joined with it was another
voice she easily recognized.
With growing
curiosity, she started up the hill. Her feet sank into the moist carpet of undergrowth
as she walked beneath trees of brightly changing foliage. Fallen heralds of
orange, red, and yellow hues blanketed the ground. Not far away, on the other
side of a patch of dense forest, the girl found her father. Oddly enough, he
was entertaining a small child. The two of them sat in an amply filled sand
box, busily constructing a castle with the aid of a small bucket and plastic
shovel. The little girl’s hair was like her own, as black and shiny as a
raven’s feathers. She was four years old at most.
Looking up, her
father saw her. No emotion crossed his face. “Hello.”
She stopped a
few yards short. “Hi.” After the mostly uphill hike, her reply was somewhat
breathless.
“Hi,” the child
greeted her happily. Deep brown eyes and a winning smile made her truly a rare
beauty, even at such a young age.
The young woman
turned to her father, her entire face a question. She waited for some sort of
explanation.
His golden hair
ruffled in the breeze as he nodded toward the child. “I found her for you.”
She shook her
head. “I don’t understand. Where are we?”
“Please come and
sit,” he said quietly.
Hesitant at
first, her feet didn’t move until the little girl echoed the man’s words,
“Please come and sit with us.”
She accepted the
invitation and sat in the sandbox. Her legs automatically folded to mirror the
child.
“Did you dream
last night?”
“No.”
“Good. I’d hoped
the tea would help.” He took her hand. His grasp was both tender and desperate.
“I promise you, this will be the last time.”
“What’s going
on?” Although she trusted her father with her very life, his behavior worried
her.
As they
conversed, the little girl had never paused at play. “And this is the tower for
the princess,” she announced proudly, while molding a lopsided chunk of sand.
Her father gazed
down at the child fondly. “Why does the princess need a tower? Shouldn’t
princesses be allowed to be free?”
The child paused
thoughtfully. Then she shook her head, sending a mass of radiant curls bouncing
in the morning sun. “No. The prince can’t find her unless she’s in a tower.”
He smiled and
turned to his daughter again. “Yes…it is time for the prince to find her.”
He took the
child’s hand and pressed it into his daughter’s. The young woman stared in
bewilderment as a warm glow filled her inside and out. Then, as if someone had
flicked a switch, everything went dark. She slumped forward. The man caught her
lifeless body, easing it down gently onto the sand. Then he leaned over and
kissed the child’s forehead softly. “I will always be close.” Not moving, the
child sat wide-eyed, staring blankly at nothing.
Hoisting the
body of the young woman into his arms, he quietly strode away with tears
streaming down his face. The trees hid him from view as the little girl blinked
twice and resumed building the tower in the sandbox.
I'm Eden Ashley and I was born and raised in a small, sunny town in
South Carolina. However, it's the thunderstorms that inspire my best
ideas. There are few things I love more than curling up with a good book and
a cup of coffee on a rainy day, (except maybe chocolate cake. I
love cake.) often reading into the wee hours of morning when something
really grabs me. I pretty much love anything with supernatural elements,
so writing paranormal romance and fantasy romance seems to be a
natural fit.
My first novel, Dark Siren, is best described as
paranormal romance artfully wrapped within a plot chock-full of action,
adventure, and edge-of-your-seat suspense, while the series has evolved to
become a journey of redemption and second chances as two characters
understand that sometimes committing evil is necessary to protect what is
loved most. I took the siren from Greek mythology (and borrowed a little
from mermaid lore), creating an entirely different creature, with its
own mythology, and one that Publisher's Weekly praised for its passion
and complexity. This is not just another werewolf/shapeshifter romance
or vampire romance. I think this is a story that both adults and teens
can enjoy, full of characters to fall in love with!
Author Links:
***GIVEAWAY***
$35 Amazon Gift Card (INTL).
Signed copy of Blood Chained (US/CAN).
One ebook copy (ePub, Mobi or PDF) of Blood Chained.
Ends December 13th (Midnight GMT).
Prize will be sent out after December 17th.
Ends December 13th (Midnight GMT).
Prize will be sent out after December 17th.
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I would love to thank Eden for writing paranormal romance and fantasy romance! Such wonderful books!
ReplyDeleteNo, thank YOU, Melinda! Writing paranormal and fantasy for readers like you is a privilege that I am absolutely honored to have. So thank you!!
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I enjoyed the excerpt, thank you.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great book! Fantastic excerpt and intriguing cover. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great read.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the awesome giveaway!
ReplyDeleteSounds like an amazing book looking forward to reading this!
ReplyDeleteI hope you love it, Amy! But no matter what, I love getting feedback :)
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Thanks everyone!! And thank you, Alecia, for hosting my book :)
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to reading This book
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