Book Cover: Vampire's Vixen: A Paranormal Women's Fiction Novel
Part of the Married At First Bite series:

Vampires don’t usually come knocking on my door, asking me to help them find love. But when Zandre, a vampire who’s been broken-hearted for two hundred years, asks me to find the reincarnation of his lost love, I’m not certain if I’m up to the job. I’ve never searched for a past-life love before.

But just as I think I’ve found her, the woman is killed, leaving Zandre even more bereft. I convince him to move on, but in the process of trying to find a new love for Zandre, he sets his sights on me. In the meantime, I’m struggling with changes in my life, and trying to make a go of a business that doesn’t seem to be flourishing.

Can I convince Zandre that I’m not his lady love, even as I’m trying to accept the new changes coming into my life?

KEYWORDS/TROPES: Paranormal, Witches, Faerie, Fae, Fairy, Weres, Shapeshifters, Romance, Paranormal Women’s Fiction, Badass heroine, kickass women, action and adventure, Ghost hunting, cats, ghosts, urban legends, shadow people, Shadow towns, wolf shifters, cat shifters, elemental magic, shapeshifter romance, mystery, strong women, kickass heroine, steamy, Pacific North West, woods, fae creatures, divorce, life change, new life, hometown, hauntings, dark creatures, amazing friendships, family secrets, spells, challenging foes, magical creatures, mythology.

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Chapter 1

The moon rose high over the clear night, on its way toward waxing. The forest around me was silent, with the faint sounds of dripping water off the tall timber. My breath formed a white mist in front of me and my nose dripped from the chill. I had almost worn earmuffs, but that would impede sound, and listening was imperative. I had to be alert in case anything out here crept up on me. I had to be ready.

Tall shadows around me loomed like denizens of the dark as I entered a small clearing. My heart racing, I forced myself to continue on. A twig snapped, startling me, and I jerked to my left, trying to see through the darkness. My eyes had already adjusted, but I wasn’t used to stumbling through the forest at midnight. I was getting a crash course, though—like being thrown in the deep end of the pool.

I tried to make out what, if anything, had been responsible for the twig snapping. I squinted, then forced myself to stop.

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Close your eyes, feel the energy, reach out with your inner sight…

I spotted a nurse log lying across the forest floor, and so I decided to take a break. The moss that covered the trunk was damp, but it wasn’t soaked, so I gingerly situated myself on the velvety trunk and let out a long breath.

As I slowly closed my eyes, I reminded myself that I was warded heavily. That yes, while I was alone, there was someone waiting in the parking lot for me, and he was ready to come to help the moment I gave the word. I had my phone, but I’d turned it off to everybody but Reese, one of the Dark Moon Society’s guardians, as they were called.

After a moment, another twig broke and I slowly turned in the direction of the noise. There, under a fern! I could see movement, though it was low to the ground. Another moment and I yanked my feet up as a red fox streaked by. I barely caught sight of it before it vanished across the clearing into the undergrowth.

A tangle of fern, huckleberry, skunk cabbage, and brambles, the foliage spread through Shorestar Park like a blanket, covering the ground, along with the layers of detritus—years of compost built up from fir needles and vine maple leaves, mushrooms and moss. The trails were kept clear, but the forest itself was a wild child of nature, one of the shadowed places that belonged to the Fae and the woodland spirits and the creatures that lurked in the shadows.

I was out here to learn how to trust myself, to commune with the land around me. It was more intense than any lesson I’d been taught during my days at Midnight Manor Academy, but if I were to belong to the Dark Moon Society, I had to learn how to walk in the shadows and stand tall. Nightshade, the leader of the coven, had ordered me into the woods to “Find what you find,” and while Reese was standing ready in case I got into serious trouble, he wasn’t allowed to help me in any other way.

What am I supposed to find? I’d asked, but Nightshade refused to tell me. She just said that I’d know it when I saw it. And so here I was, creeping through the forest, cold and uncertain, looking for something that I’d only know if I was alert enough to recognize it.

After a while, I stood. Whatever I was looking for, I wouldn’t find here, sitting on a tree. I turned toward the depths of the park, which was well over six hundred acres of thick timber. With a deep breath, I started walking again, determined to finish the task.

***

Five…ten…fifteen…minutes later, I felt hopelessly lost. I had no clue which way I had turned, and now every step was difficult. The park was on a hillock, rising from the waters of Puget Sound, sloping upward toward the center of the island.

The grade was growing steeper, and I realized that I was in a ravine, heading uphill. I had a walking stick with me, but it was still difficult in the dark. I had only my senses to go on, and the faint light from the moon.

As I struggled, trying to step carefully so I didn’t sprain an ankle, I happened to glance to my left again. There, farther along the slope, was a glowing light.

I froze. What the hell? There weren’t any streetlights in Shorestar Park, none that I knew of. So what was it? Wondering if it were someone with a flashlight, I kept my gaze on it, but the light didn’t move or shift position. It was rock-steady.

“Maybe that’s what I’m supposed to find,” I whispered, more to keep myself company than anything else. I began to wade through the foliage in the direction from which it was shining. As I grew closer, the hairs on my arms stood tall, and a trickle of sweat chilled my forehead.

Whatever it was, my body responded to the energy. My stomach clenched, and my hand—holding the walking stick—began to shake. There was power here, a power so strong that I wanted to turn tail and run, but that was the last thing I could do. Not if I wanted to secure my place in the Dark Moon Society.

“Work through the fear,” I muttered. “Feel the fear and do it anyway. You can do this. Nightshade wouldn’t send you into danger…”

But that wasn’t true. She had and she would again—sending me to take on a psychic vampire had been dangerous. And yet I had done it. But this was for the gold. This was for a place in the Court Magika’s Order of the Moon, and I didn’t want to fail. My aunt had gone through this, and now it was my turn.

I cautiously navigated through the ferns and vines, grimacing as my hand brushed a stinging nettle leaf. Welts rose immediately, and I winced as the sting from the plant burned against my skin. Skirting the area where I thought there might be a full patch of it, I cleared the plants and came out into another small clearing.

And there was the glowing object.

I caught my breath. It was a tall rock, standing between two yew trees, and it glowed with a neon light. Sparkles came flying from it, and—as I approached—my inner alarm bells began to ring. Beyond the rock, faint lines of light stretched between the trees, crackling like miniature lightning bolts.

“What the hell?” My fear fading into curiosity, I stepped close to the rock. There was some sort of writing on it, but I couldn’t read what it said. Instead, I glanced beyond the rock at the yews. There, standing in the center of them, was a man.

He wore blue jeans and leather boots that must have had platforms a good twelve inches high. He was at least seven feet tall, maybe more, and his eyes shimmered, black except for the glowing white slits that reminded me of a cat’s eyes. His coat dragged against the ground, made of ragged patchwork, and his hair flowed over his shoulders, down his back. He wore a headdress fashioned like a giant crow, and feathers trailed down his back.

I caught my breath and stumbled back. I’d never seen him before, but I knew who he was. Nobody who ever lived in a shadow town forgot tales of the Crow Man, a messenger of the gods—the Morrígan in particular. But he paved the way for the gods to speak, acting as their liaison through the crows and ravens and birds of the world.

He was best known over in Whisper Hollow, but the Crow Man knew no limits as to where he could appear. I slowly knelt, cowed by the raw power standing in front of me, but waited for him to speak. I honestly didn’t know what to say.

“Welcome to my forests,” the Crow Man said, and his voice sang on the wind, low and sonorous, ricocheting around me. “Priestess of Aphrodite. Stand before me.”

I slowly rose, almost unable to breathe. His voice sent a jolt through me, down my spine like lightning. As he stepped toward me, the forest shivered with every step, letting out a sigh as though it mirrored his breathing.

He stared at me, his gaze piercing my soul, and I felt something stir that I didn’t know I had within me—passion and a hunger so deep that it made me ache. And yet…I knew that if I drank from his well, I would lose myself forever, lost in the spiral of his magic.

The woodland quaked with every step he took, as though he were a giant crossing mountain tops. Tears trickled down my cheeks—he was so incredibly beautiful and terrifying. He stopped when he was almost within my reach, staring down at me. His eyes flashed and a shower of sparks flecked the black orbs, emanating from the blinding light that filtered through the slits of his pupils. I wanted to run, to fall facedown, to be anywhere but in his presence, and yet, I could stand here a thousand years in the intensity of his power.

With one hand, he reached up to the trailing feathers of his headdress. “Your priestess petitioned me. She follows my Lady of Phantasms and Nightmares. The dark tides are returning, and the elder gods are waking.” He held out his other hand. On his index finger was a ring, a massive sapphire, the largest I’d ever seen. “If you would join the witches who fight against them, kiss my ring in pledge.”

I finally found my voice. “What oath am I making?”

He grinned then, sly and deadly. “Your oath is to follow those who lead the fight against chaos, even through the Veil. Your honor to the gods who seek to prevent chaos and fury from the ancient world, from rising new in the world. Your Lady, Aphrodite, is one of those who stands against the dark tides.”

I knew he was telling the truth. It resonated on such a deep level it almost doubled me over. Aphrodite, my goddess, was—along with some other goddesses—joined with the Morrígan, and as such, with the Crow Man. I quickly whispered a prayer for guidance, but the moment the words escaped my lips, I knew that this was the direction in which I was supposed to journey.

I looked up at the Crow Man, who waited, frozen as though he was a statue. I wanted him to reach out, to touch my face, but the thought of his fingers on my skin sent warnings through me. If he did, I’d never be the same.

“I will,” I whispered hoarsely. “In the name of Aphrodite, I pledge myself to this cause.”

Leaning forward, I bent toward his hand. As my lips touched the sapphire, a wave rolled through me, painful and beautiful and the most haunting song I’d ever heard echoed around me. I began to cry, as I stood. I’d just bound myself to a task so great that it dwarfed everything around me. As I straightened up, his sly smile turned somber, and he looked almost sad.

“Your pledge has been accepted. By the gods, by the Morrígan, by Aphrodite, I bind you to this task, to this journey, to this mission. May all of the gods protect you, and may my crows pick your bones if you break your vow.” And then, he reached up and drew one finger down my cheek, and I came so hard that I almost fainted.

With a delighted laugh, he winked at me. “Welcome to my world, Maisy. You now belong to Midnight Point, and all the shadow towns under my watch.”

Without another word, he vanished, and the energy streams between the two yews vanished. I was left alone in the forest, wondering what the hell had just happened.

COLLAPSE

Playlist for Vampire's Vixen

070 Shake: The Pines
AC/DC: Back In Black
Adele: Rumour Has It
Aerosmith: Walk This Way
After the Fire: Der Kommissar
Air: Napalm Love; Playground Love
Alanis Morissette: Eight Easy Steps; Hand In My Pocket
Android Lust: Here And Now
Arch Leaves: Nowhere To Go
Awolnation: Sail
Band of Skulls: I Know What I Am
Beck: Qué Onda Guero; Farewell Ride; Emergency Exit; Think I’m In Love
The Black Angels: Don’t Play With Guns
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club: Feel It Now
Blind Melon: No Rain
Bobbie Gentry: Ode To Billie Joe
Broken Bells: The Ghost Inside
Buffalo Springfield: For What It’s Worth
Camouflage Nights: It Could Be Love
Chris Isaak: Wicked Game
Cold Showers: Only Human
Crazy Town: Butterfly
Crosby, Stills & Nash: Guinnevere
David Bowie: Golden Years; China Girl
Deap Valley: Gonna Get To You; Royal Jelly
Death Cab For Cutie: I Will Possess Your Heart
Eastern Sun: Beautiful Being
Eels: Souljacker Part1
Fats Domino: I Want To Walk You Home
Fleetwood Mac: The Chain
Foster the People: Pumped Up Kicks
Garbage: Only Happy When It Rains; I Think I’m Paranoid
George Benson: On Broadway
Geri Halliwell: Look At Me
Gerry Rafferty: Baker Street
Gordon Lightfoot: Sundown; Wreck Of The Edmond Fitzgerald
Jay Price: Dark Hearted Man; The Devil’s Bride; Coming For You Baby
Jeannie C. Riley: Harper Valley P.T.A.
Jessica Bates: The Hanging Tree
John Fogerty: The Old Man Down the Road
Johnny Otis: Willy & The Hand Jive
Julian Cope: Charlotte Anne
Kirsty MacColl: In These Shoes?
Ladytron: Paco!; Ghosts; I’m Not Scared
Loreena McKennitt: The Mummer’s Dance; Marco Polo
Lovely Slaughter: Petty AF
Low: Witches; Plastic Cup; Half-Light
Marcy Playground: Comin’ Up From Behind
Matt Corby: Breathe
Nancy Sinatra: These Boots Are Made For Walkin’
Neil Young: Cinnamon Girl
Nik Ammar: Hollywood
Nirvana: Heart Shaped Box; Come As You Are; Something In The Way; Plateau; Lake Of Fire; All Apologies
Oingo Boingo: Dead Man’s Party; Grey Matter; Gratitude; Nothing Bad Ever Happens To Me
The Pierces: Secret
Puddle of Mudd: Famous; Psycho
Red Venom: Let’s Get It On
Robin Schulz: Sugar
Róisin Murphy: Ramalama (Bang Bang)
Sam the Sham & the Pharaohs: Lil’ Red Riding Hood
Seth Glier: The Next Right Thing
The Shins: So Says I
Shriekback: Underwaterboys; Nemesis; Deeply Lined Up; Shark Walk; New Man; Go Bang; Dust And A Shadow; This Big Hush; And The Rain; Now These Days Are Gone; The King In The Tree; Lined Up
Simple Minds: Don’t You
The Sugarhill Gang: Rapper’s Delight
Susan Enan: Bring On The Wonder
Sweet Talk Radio: We All Fall Down
Tamaryn: While You’re Sleeping, I’m Dreaming; Violet’s In A Pool
The Temptations: Papa Was A Rollin’ Stone
Thompson Twins: The Gap
Tom Petty: Mary Jane’s Last Dance
Tori Amos: Cornflake Girl
Traffic: The Low Spark Of High Heeled Boys
Trills: Speak Loud
Valen: Cold Blood
Van Morrison: Moondance
The Verve: Bitter Sweet Symphony
Zero 7: In The Waiting Line

Vampire’s Vixen: A Paranormal Women’s Fiction Novel

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