Book Title: Stygian
Author: Nashoda Rose
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Release Date: March 30, 2015
Hosted by: Book Enthusiast Promotions
Danni: Mortal
I remember nothing of my abduction two years ago. Sounds and scents trigger horrific flashes, but it’s all a blur except for one man with brilliant green eyes. When the tatted six foot two Adonis shows up at my door, my knowledge of the world is shattered.
Bound to the immortal Scar by an ancient spell, we are on the run. Because Balen is the hunted.
And if he dies, so do I.
Balen: Scar Tracker
My code of honor was respected without question … until I consumed the blood of a vampire in exchange for a mortal woman’s freedom.
The Scars want me imprisoned. The Wraiths want me dead.
But the woman I can’t forget needs me. And I’ll risk everything to protect her.
Even if it means killing her.
Because in order for her to live—first she must die.
Full-length novel. Come meet the Scars.
Scars: Immortal warriors with capabilities derived from the senses: Trackers, Sounders, Healers, Tasters, Visionaries, and the rare Reflectors. They each have what is known as an Ink, a tattoo that can be called to life.
There are three full-length prequels to TAKE (scars of the wraiths). This is book One.
All three prequels were previously published and have been re-written entirely and are now in multiple first person POVs.
*Stygian was originally entitled JUMP.
Before: Danni
The terror of dying had vanished—now I prayed for it.
His dagger-like nails tapped slow and precise up my neck
until he reached the underside of my chin. He caressed the sensitive area with
the pad of his finger then shoved his thumb upward between the curves of my jaw
bone. It forced my mouth shut and I bit down hard on my tongue. Blood began to
pool in my mouth and I couldn’t swallow with the pressure.
I breathed in and out frantically through my nose. I was
going to choke on my own blood. I was going to die.
“Tilt your head,” he ordered.
The pressure increased and I turned my head, exposing the
side of my neck. He moved his thumb away and I quickly spit out the blood.
Remnants dribbled from the corners of my mouth and down my chin.
“Beautiful,” he purred, then curled his hand around the back
of my neck and lifted slightly. I clenched my hands into fists, waiting for the
familiar pain. I refused to scream—it made no difference anyway—no one was
rescuing me from this monster.
I squeezed my eyes shut as he leaned over me, the odor of
black licorice flooding my nostrils. He hissed and it sounded like the slow
drag of a zipper being undone. I tensed and stopped breathing just before his
fangs pierced my neck.
I silently cried as I lay unmoving, powerless to refuse him,
frozen in the nightmare that had become reality. His lips were cold against my
skin as he sucked the warmth of my blood. Each pull draining my strength until
my hands unclenched and my nails embedded in my palms, released.
His tongue flicked over my neck and he lifted his head. “My
sugary, Danielle.”
His voice was a calm melody, as if a paintbrush across a
fresh white canvas, sweeping, rhythmic and subtle. I hated how it was
captivating, how I compared it to something I loved, but I had no control over
it.
I lay limp as the shackles released and cold, fish-like
hands grabbed my arms and dragged me across the damp, dirt floor to the cage.
My haven. Away from him. Away from the torture.
The monster threw me inside and I landed hard on my knees
then collapsed to my side. The door slammed and locked.
Footsteps.
Metal grinding.
Clicking.
The cage lifted off the ground, rocking back and forth as it
was cranked upward until it settled next to two other cages.
I was so cold. Endless shivering that made my muscles ache
from constantly trying to provide my body with warmth. My throat was dry and
hoarse from screaming, as if a razor blade had scraped the flesh.
“Jesus.” A few feet away I heard the familiar graveled
voice—Balen, my only comfort here. The rusted pipes overhead groaned as the
continuous spray of water sprinkled inside his cage. “Christ, I’m sorry.”
It took too much energy to move, but I opened my eyes to
look at him. My neighboring prisoner gripped the bars, knuckles white. His
tense body a spring wound up so tight that it looked ready to fracture. His leg
hung at an odd angle, mangled from the sledge hammer they tortured him with.
Despite his ravaged body, he was beautiful. Tattoos
contoured to the hills and valleys of his muscular arms and chest. I’d caught a
glimpse of a tiger on his lower back that was so intricate it looked alive. But
it was his eyes that captivated me. Brilliant green, piercing and hard, filled
with a haunting torment. When he was angry, the green darkened and looked
almost black.
“Don’t you dare give up.”
I had already. I never thought I would in the beginning, but
now…
“Look at me!” I heard what sounded like his fist pounding
into the metal bars. “Look. At. Me.”
His tone was furious, and yet, I wasn’t scared of him. How
could I be? He was all I had in this place.
Our eyes locked and the tension in his jaw eased. “You need
to drink, Danni. Move closer.”
Water. I closed my eyes and imagined holding a cool glass of
water and chugging it back; the liquid sliding down my throat, coating the
harsh dryness. I’d never thought about the daily bottles of water I’d consumed,
but now … now it was all I thought about. “I’m not letting you die, damn it.”
His voice was harsh and abrupt and yet to me it was soothing.
Fearless. That’s what he was. He never screamed when they
tortured him, never broke. I wanted that. To be brave again. But he had sucked
it out of me.
I crawled across the metal floor and put my hands through
the bars, cupping them together. I closed my eyes, afraid he wouldn’t be able
to reach me this time.
But when the cool saturation hit my skin, tears pooled in my
eyes. Water trickled through the crevices between my fingers and I quickly
jolted back, afraid to lose a single drop of what he offered.
I licked my palms, the wetness adhering to my throat—velvet.
I reached out again and this time opened my eyes. He
collected the water from the shower head attached to the top of his cage. It
was a light spray and it took agonizing minutes just to gather a small handful.
We repeated the process five times, until my arms resisted
rising any longer. “Thank you,” I whispered.
He sat and leaned up against the bars, leg bent and his arm
resting on it; casual and indifferent and yet everything in his expression
contradicted it. “Damn it Danni, you need to lock your mind from your body.
Shut it down like I told you.” He sounded angry, but I knew it was because he
was worried. “Separate the two. Don’t let him win.”
It was too late for that. He’d won the battle already.
“Danni.”
I curled up on my side in a ball, my knees to my chin and my
arms wrapped around them, trying to provide myself with some sort of warmth.
Then I closed my eyes and prayed for the darkness to take
me.
I thought I heard him say something else, but I was already
slipping into the void. It didn’t matter anyway. Nothing did.
Nashoda Rose is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author who lives in Toronto with her assortment of pets. She writes contemporary romance with a splash of darkness, or maybe it’s a tidal wave.
When she isn't writing, she can be found sitting in a field reading with her dogs at her side while her horses graze nearby. She loves interacting with her readers and chatting about her addiction—books.
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