Rogue’s Pawn
Author: Jeffe Kennedy
Series: Covenant of Thorns
Genre: Fantasy/Paranormal Romance
Release Date: July 16, 2012
Summary:
This is no fairy tale…
Haunted
by nightmares of a black dog, sick to death of my mind-numbing career
and heart-numbing fiancĂ©, I impulsively walked out of my life—and fell
into Faerie. Terrified, fascinated, I discover I possess a power I can’t
control: my wishes come true. After an all-too-real attack by the
animal from my dreams, I wake to find myself the captive of the
seductive and ruthless fae lord Rogue. In return for my rescue, he
demands an extravagant price—my firstborn child, which he intends to
sire himself…
With no hope of escaping this world, I must
learn to harness my magic and build a new life despite the
perils—including my own inexplicable and debilitating desire for Rogue. I
swear I will never submit to his demands, no matter what erotic torment
he subjects me to…
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“Enough,” a male voice said.
As
if I’d ceased to exist, Tinker Bell blinked her eyes and regained her
lovely self, face smoothing, shining once again in sunny elegance.
Reboot and resume program. She gracefully stood and glided to the tray,
set the bowl precisely in the center, lifted the tray and left the room
without hesitation.
Booted footsteps crossed the room
toward me. Act II, scene ii. Exit Nasty Tinker Bell, Enter
God-Only-Knows-What-Now. My face was sticky with whatever the brothy
stuff had been, my hair wet and fouled. I stank. I hurt. I was chained
to a bed in a place so completely unknown I couldn’t begin to understand
it. I tried to squeeze my legs closer together, but the chains seemed
at the limit of their reach. The energy of my brief triumph evaporated,
allowing tears to well up again.
Oh, please, please,
please, do not cry. The threatening sting worsened. I closed my eyes and
one tear leaked out. He stopped next to me, surveying me.
“You’re certainly a mess.” His wry voice was rich and smooth.
My
eyes snapped open to glare at him through the blur. Fifty different
smart remarks flew across my tongue, most along the lines that any
failures of appearance on my part could be laid on the doorstep of
someone besides myself. But even the buzz of the first word on my vocal
chords brought searing agony. Relieved to have a legitimate reason for
the tears, I almost welcomed the searing sensation.
“No,
don’t try to talk—no one needs to hear what you have to say, anyway. Not
that we can help it, since you think so loudly. And you have a decision
to make. We have a quandary.” He began pacing, boots echoing against
stone. “No one can heal you while you’re bound in silver and we can’t
release you from the silver until you have yourself under control. Which
will take a considerably long time—perhaps years of training—if you’re
even able to accomplish it at all.”
I thought of the birds crashing in increasing cacophony with a small shudder.
“Exactly,”
he confirmed. “And yes,” he said from the window behind my head where
he seemed to be gazing out, “I can hear most of your thoughts—another
reason to save trying to speak aloud.”
My stomach
congealed in panic. Had he heard my secret thoughts? Don’t think of
them, bury them deep, deep. Think of other things…like what? Think of
home, think of Isabel. Isabel, my cat—Clive hated her. What would happen
to her now? How could I not have thought of her until this moment?
Abandoned, wondering why I never came home for her… And my mother—she’d
be frantic. How long had I been gone? They could be all dead and buried,
lost to me forever. The anguish racked me.
“Shh.” The
man sat on the side of my bed now, heavier than Nasty Tinker Bell. He
brushed the hair back from my forehead, then placed his long fingers
over my brow and, with his thumbs, rhythmically smoothed along my
cheekbones, wiping away the tears that now flowed freely.
I
stifled a sob. I had cried more in the past day than I had in years.
The sweeping along my cheekbones soothed me, melting warmth through my
skull. The rhythm became part of my breathing. Deep breaths. Smooth,
easy. The awful tightness in my chest gave a little sigh and released.
“Let’s
try again, shall we?” The man pulled his hands away. I could hear him
brush them against his thighs. Soup, tears and blood. Yuck.
My
eyes cleared enough for me to see him. Ebony-blue climbed over half his
face. The winding pattern of angular spirals and toothy spikes swirled
out of his black hair on the left side of his face, placing sharp
fingers along his cheekbone, jaw and brow. For a moment, the tattoo-like
pattern dominated everything about him. Ferocious and alien.
Once
I adjusted, I could see past the lines. His face echoed Tinker Bell’s
golden coloring.
He could be her fraternal twin, with those same arched
cheekbones. But where she was golden dawn, he was darkest night.
Midnight-blue eyes, that deep blue just before all light was gone from
the sky, when the stars have emerged, but you could see the black
shadows of trees against the night. He shared Tinker Bell’s rose-petal
mouth, but with a curious edge to it. I suppose a man’s mouth shouldn’t
remind one of a flower, and there was nothing feminine about this man.
Where she wore the pink sugar roses of debutantes and bridal showers,
his lips made me think of the blooms of late summer, the sharp-ruffled
dianthus, edges darkening to blood in the heat. His bone structure was
broader than hers but still seemed somehow differently proportioned, his
arms hanging a bit too long from shoulders not quite balanced to his
height. Inky hair pulled back from his face fell in a tail down his
back. One strand had escaped to fall over his shoulder and I could see a
blue shimmer in its silk sheen.
He arched his left eyebrow, blueness in the elegant arch, repeating the deep shades of the fanged lines around it.
“Shall we?” he repeated.
I stared at him. What was the question?
About the Author:
Jeffe Kennedy took the crooked road
to writing, stopping off at neurobiology, religious studies and
environmental consulting before her creative writing began appearing in
places like Redbook, Puerto del Sol, Wyoming Wildlife, Under the Sun and
Aeon. An erotic novella, Petals and Thorns, came out under her pen name
of Jennifer Paris in 2010, heralding yet another branch of her path,
into erotica and romantic fantasy fiction. Since then, an erotic short,
Feeding the Vampire, and another erotic novella, Sapphire, have hit the
shelves.
Her contemporary fantasy novel, Rogue’s Pawn,
book one in A Covenant of Thorns, will be published in July, 2012. Jeffe
lives in Santa Fe, with two Maine coon cats, a border collie, plentiful
free-range lizards and frequently serves as a guinea pig for an
acupuncturist-in-training. Find her on Facebook and Twitter
(@jeffekennedy) or visit her at her website.
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