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Archive for March, 2009



Tuesday, March 31st, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves: All About the Alpha

Full Moon of Werewolves Schedule

About today’s guest: Cynthia Eden
Cynthia Eden writes paranormal and romantic suspense novels. She’s always loved writing (don’t most authors say that?), and particularly enjoys creating stories about monsters–vampires, werewolves, all of those creatures that haunt the imagination.

Hi, everyone! It is a pleasure to be here today, taking part in the Full Moon of Werewolves fun.

Thanks for inviting me over, Lori!

Hotter after MidnightI love werewolves. I mean, come on—they’re strong, they’re wild, and on really cold nights, they’ve got lots of warm, furry covering.

The alpha wolf, though, has a particular appeal for me. The alpha is the strongest of the strong, the one willing to defend his pack no matter what the cost. An alpha can walk through the fire—and barely feel the burn. And, of course, an alpha is totally devoted to his mate. Bonding for life—what’s better than that?

Oh, yeah, I’m all about the alpha.

I’ve written my share of werewolf novels. Sometimes, my werewolves (or wolf shifters as I tend to call them), are the heroes. In HOTTER AFTER MIDNIGHT (May 08 from Kensington Brava), my hero, Colin Gyth, was a wolf shifter. He was the man who went after a vicious killer to save the woman he loved—and he never hesitated.

Immortal DangerBut, in IMMORTAL DANGER, my new book (new because it releases today—yay!), I’m afraid that the werewolf in my story, well, he isn’t the hero. Sometimes, even the alphas can be bad.

Here’s an excerpt from IMMORTAL DANGER, featuring my not-so-heroic wolf:
***

The bones snapped, crunched. The fur melted from his body and the beast that had prowled on four legs slowly stood upright.

Blood dripped in long, slow rivulets down Lucas Simone’s shoulder.

The bitch had shot him. With a silver bullet.

The poison was in his body. He could feel it, eating away at him.

He lifted his right hand. The tips of his nails stretched into three-inch long claws. Clenching his teeth, he drove the claws straight into his wounded shoulder.

His pack gathered around him, heads low, bodies shaking.

The blood poured faster now.

He ripped away the skin, the muscle. Found the bullet. Jerked it from his shoulder.

The silver burned his fingers and he threw it, tossing the bullet far into the night.

In the distance, he could hear the roar of the motorcycle, fading now as the vampire fled.

She hadn’t been his prey. He’d wanted the man.

The rules of the game had changed now.

“We find them,” he said, his voice ringing loud and clear. The wolves around him stiffened, stared with unblinking eyes. “I don’t care how long it takes, but we find them.” There would be no safe place for the vampire and the man.

The wolves began to growl.

He held up his hand. Skin and blood coated his claws. “The vampire is mine.” Blood for blood. The others needed to know the kill would be his.

Only his.

Lucas threw back his head, rage racing through his body, and howled his fury to the night.

***

Thanks for checking out my post! And, tell me, what are your thoughts on the alpha werewolf? Good and bad?

Cynthia Eden
www.cynthiaeden.com
IMMORTAL DANGER—03/31/09 from Kensington Brava
Believe in monsters. They believe in you.

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Monday, March 30th, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves: Escaping the World in Stories & Prize!

Full Moon of Werewolves Schedule

About today’s guest: Terry Spear
Terry Spear is an award-winning author of urban fantasy and medieval historical romantic suspense. Her novel, Heart of the Wolf was named as one of Publishers Weekly’s BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR.

Also one lucky commenter will win a copy of either Heart of the Wolf or Destiny of the Wolf (your choice). Just leave a comment on this post to be entered. Winner will be announced at end of Full Moon promotion. Last day to enter Saturday, April 25th at midnight central U.S. time.

Destiny of the WolfWhen creating worlds, shapeshifter werewolves or any other, we stimulate the imagination. For me, creating an unreal world but making it as real as possible gives the reader a place to connect with snippets of life that we have actually experienced perhaps, but in a world that cannot be real. We are storytellers who love to weave tales of mystery, suspense, romance, and adventure. To allow our readers a form of escapism. There’s nothing better than a good book to let go of the every day stresses, the boredom, the desire to experience other worlds for ourselves, that we cannot explore otherwise, whether they are real or unreal.

I saw a funny article wherein the author talked about how lawyers are storytellers. I never thought of it that way, but think of a lawyer who is trying to get a really bad guy off the hook. Everyone knows he is guilty. But if the lawyer can make the story believable enough, create enough doubt in the jurors’ minds or the judges, just maybe, he or she can get the guilty party off.

And so in that instance, the lawyer is the greatest storyteller of all, weaving a real, if it is true, or unreal world, if it will get the client off who is guilty.

I was just reading a romance where the heroine had gotten a really bad guy acquitted of a child murder and she retired from the practice because she knew he had gotten off when he was guilty as sin.

This reminds me of another story where the lawyer creates enough reasonable doubt in the courtroom, this time concerning the viability of there being a real Santa Clause. Remember the story? Miracle on 34th Street.

So here’s to storytellers who make us dream, escape, and believe, and to wolves and their human halves, that are just plain fun to read and write about!

Come and check out my werewolf tales, Heart of the Wolf and Destiny of the Wolf, available now, and To Tempt the Wolf, coming Sep 1. Also, Deadly Liaisons, vampire romantic suspense is coming March 31!

Terry Spear
www.terryspear.com

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Sunday, March 29th, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves: A Werewolf tells all

Full Moon of Werewolves Schedule

About today’s guest: Marissa Turner
Today’s post is by Cliodhna ‘Clio’ Richardson–the main character of Marissa Turner’s novel, GENTRY. Cliodhna lives as simple a life as she can. She’s married, has a job, and friends she can count on. Which comes in handy, as her husband has just left for his second tour of duty in the Giant Sandbox of Hell, also known as Iraq.

The night he leaves, she sneaks off to Tybee Island, land of money and vacationers, to do something that, if the other wives found out about, they’d lynch her.

You see, Clio is a werewolf, and damn proud of it. Her husband… well, he’s still learning to deal with the fact his wife goes furry a couple of times a month.

GentryHi all, Clio here. If you want to get into stats, my full name Cliodhna Lee Richardson, and my dam uses it often when I’ve done something wrong. I’m twenty six, shorter than I’d like to be, married to a soldier, and usually pretty happy about that. There’s a bump in the road right now, but that’s normal, isn’t it?

Moving on. You’re not here to hear about my marriage anyway, you want to know about the werewolves.

First things first, we do exist. Sit back and soak that in for a second. I just came out of the proverbial woods to you, dear stranger, and believe me, this is a big step. We live in secrecy for a reason, and I just popped that secret bubble with the mother of all straight pins.

I’m going to assume you’ve read the history of the werewolf legend; some of those legends are true. We do change shape into that of a wolf, but we’re big ass wolves. The male grey wolf (Canis Lupus) can sometimes reach weights of one hundred and thirty pounds. That’s not the norm however. Typical weight is around seventy, and can be up to a buck-ten.

Werewolves weigh more than that, simply because most people are not one hundred and ten pounds. I myself am one hundred and fifty pounds, but it’s only a forty pound difference. Add in thick midnight fur, and most write my wolf form off as a Canis Lupus who had the bad luck to interbreed with a large domestic dog, such as a Great Dane or Irish Wolfhound. (How’s that for irony?) My best friend, Angelo Nydarski, is almost three hundred pounds; no human who sees his wolf form thinks he’s anything but a monster.

As a funny side note, did you know that the black pelted wolves have a genetic abnormality that first appeared in the domestic dog? Make all the jokes you want about that.

We hunt, but only animals. Rabbit is a favorite of mine, they have a buttery taste that is both sweet and smooth on my tongue. And their bones don’t hurt my teeth when I bite them. Angelo prefers deer, but I think that has more to do with him wanting to have a full stomach than with how they taste.

We aren’t repelled by silver, nor are we ruled by the moon. Our emotions run high in the full moon, but that can be said about the entire people population of this great planet. We do need to change shape often, at least twice a week, in order to keep our duality running normally, but we can go through full moon nights on two legs and be as innocent as three lambs.

Our changes are incredibly painful. Have you ever broken a bone? Even a little one? Now, take that pain, and multiply it by two-hundred and five (since you’ve broken one bone already, we won’t count that one.) Every single bone in our human shape shatters and reforms into those of the wolf.

Other myths and legends, however, are complete and utter bullshit. Harsh opinion, I know, but that’s how I feel.

There is not a grain of truth in the whole being bitten (or scratched!) makes you a werewolf thing. I’ve bitten my mate several, if not hundreds, of times during intense interpersonal relations, and he’s as human now as he was the day I met him. And I am not a gentle biter by anyone’s standards. He’s had to do PT with his back cut to ribbons from my nails, and believe me, I think he’d have preferred the pain of a transformation than sweat in bleeding wounds.

As far as I know, there is no magic ritual to make you a werewolf either. Have you seen what is in most of those ‘magic’ salves that need to be used? There’s enough hallucinogenic plants in there to make you think you’re a purple dragon in a red tutu named Louise.

Wearing a wolfskin won’t make you a werewolf either. It’ll make you a killer.

Sorry, that last part came off as bitchy, but it’s how I feel. I don’t understand the driving need some people have to eradicate a species based upon fear. It’s one reason me and mine have stayed in the woods for so long; look at history and tell me that people don’t kill off whoever, or whatever, they can when their fear is riding high.

I guess what my plan was for this little essay was to show you that we’re not the beasts of legend. We love, we hurt, and we try to enjoy life the best we can. We’re just like most humans, except we can change shape.

Remember, we’re all in this together, whether you like us or not. It’s best not to take anything too seriously, because we never make it out of this world alive anyway.

Saturday, March 28th, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves this week…

Dark Crusade, paranormal romanceI thought it might be time to post a reminder of what exactly a Full Moon of Werewolves is and what to look for this week. The full official schedule for the Full Moon of Werewolves can be found here. The event is to celebrate the fourth in my Unbound series, Dark Crusade. For the next thirty days (20 some now) I will have prizes, interviews, excerpts and essays all on werewolves.!

Grand prize of $100 in werewolf books! To enter comment on individual Full Moon posts–at my blog starting March 23. You can comment as much as you want; one comment per post will be counted as an entry. There will also be some daily prizes. (Prizes shipped to U.S. addresses only unless otherwise indicated in post, all contests end Saturday April 25th at midnight.)

Publisher: Silhouette Nocturne
ISBN: 978-0373618095
Genre: Dark Paranormal Romance
Release Date: April 2009

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Date Author Type of post
March 29 Marissa Turner One Werewolf tells all
March 30 Terry Spear Topic to be announced
March 31 Cynthia Eden All About the Alpha
April 1 Margaret L. Carter Theories of Lycanthropy & a Prize!
April 2 Lori Devoti A Garm does not a Werewolf make & a Prize!
April 3 Bonnie Vanak Topic to be announced
April 4 Teresa D’Amario Why I write about werewolves & Prize!
Saturday, March 28th, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves: Were’s my YA, by Heather M. Riley

Full Moon of Werewolves Schedule

About today’s guest: Heather M. Riley
Heather M. Riley is a bookseller and blogger. She blogs for Crave More Romance and Want My YA.

I was thrilled when Lori invited me back to her blog for her Full Moon of Werewolves. Then I instantly went into a panic realizing I needed to find something to talk about.. That’s when I had my “duh” moment. I’m the YA blogger in this lineup (well maybe not THE blogger, but you get my point), why not talk about werewolves in YA?

Blood and ChocolateThis sent me on a search for books to discuss. My first thought was Blood and Chocolate by Annette Curtis Klause. After all, I already own the book and I loved the movie (more on that later). However I decided initially to take a different direction and find some books that people may not have heard of yet.

First I picked up Weregirls: Birth of the Pack by Petru Popescu. This book is definitely not your traditional werewolf story. From the back copy I could tell it was about four young girls and their soccer team, the Weregirls. Lily is the leader of this pack of girls; she’s the one who forms their soccer club when the school refuses to make them an official team. The action is a bit slow to start with this book. Initally there’s a lot of drama surrounding the soccer club and the new girl in town, Andra, who seems determined to take the one thing Lily’s worked so hard for away from her. Despite being dead, Lily’s father becomes a central character in this story. In the beginning it’s just his memory and the impact of his absence on Lily and her mother. However after finding his mirror, his “moonglass” in the garage, Lily begins to actually hear her father speaking to her. It’s through him that she learns the truth behind the stories of the weregirls that he used to share with Lily and her friends. Weregirls: Birth of the PackThese weren’t merely stories. Each of the girls has a weregirl watching over and protecting them. It’s after these revelations are made that everthing picks up and now on top of the drama there’s real danger. Andra is right in the center of all of it, the soccer club was just a means to an end for her. Andra wants far more from Lily than that, and she’s a girl used to getting what she wants.

Next I read Moonlight: A Dark Guardian Novel by Rachel Hawthorne. This is the first book in her Dark Guardians series. And while I enjoyed Weregirls, I LOVED Moonlight. Rachel Hawthorne’s story is a lot more in line with what you expect of a werewolf story. When she was just five years old, Kayla’s parents were killed. While out in the woods they were shot by some drunk hunters who insisted that they’d seen wolves and were just trying to protect the little girl. Kayla doesn’t get it, how stupid and drunk did they have to be to see wolves in place of humans? Now just before her seventeenth birthday Kayla has returned to the same woods. The summer before her adoptive parents took her camping there as part of her therapy and her need to face her past. While there she befriended Lindsey, their guide, or sherpa as they are called. Lindsey convinced Kayla to return and become a sherpa herself. Kayla was glad to return, not only for Lindsey, but also for Luke. Moonlight: A Dark Guardian NovelShe’s both attracted to and afraid of Luke. He’s so intense and her feelings for him are unlike any feelings she’s ever had for another guy. Now Kayla is getting ready to go on her first mission with several other sherpas, Luke among them. They are leading a professor and his group of grad students out into the wild to a predermined campsite and then return for them a couple of weeks later. It sounds like a fairly basic mission until the campfire conversation turns one night from the wolves the grad students are supposedly studying, to werewolves. Everyone laughs it off, but Kayla wonders, do these people really belive in werewolves? When everything comes to light, the real motives of the professor and his students, the secrets of her fellow sherpas, and the truth behind her parents deaths, it’s almost more than Kayla can bear. But bear it she does, and with a strength beyond her years.

Moonlight was just an all-around great read. Whether you’re looking at it as a werewolf story or not. I do love the way the werewolf mythology was handled, and I really loved Kayla and all the supporting characters. Kayla wasn’t thrilled with the truth once she learned it, she tried to rebel in her head, but when it came down to it, she was strong and she knew what she had to do. I also absolutely adored Luke and the romance between him and Kayla. I love it when the feelings between two characters just leap off the page and land right there in your chest. I’m addicted and panting for the next Dark Guardian story.

Now back to Blood and Chocolate, well I’m still reading that one. I tried, but didn’t quite get everything read like I wanted to in time for this post. What I can tell you so far, is that while I am totally in love with the movie version, a great many liberties were taken with the story. Like so far the only similarities are the title, the character names (some of them), and the whole werewolf/ loup garou thing. It’s certainly interesting. I’ll be sure to pop back with a comment or three once I actually finish this one.

So now it’s your turn.. Have you come across any YA werewolf gems that I missed?

Friday, March 27th, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves: Werewolf-aholic by Linda Thomas-Sundstrom

Full Moon of Werewolves Schedule

About today’s guest: Linda Thomas-Sundstrom
Linda Thomas-SundstromLinda Thomas-Sundstrom is a native of California, where she lives with her husband and teaches at a major California University. Linda writes in the genres of fantasy and romance, and at the moment has two more books in the works in the paranormal romance genre. She prefers reading and writing dark historicals, with plenty of gothic-style atmosphere, but on a challenge from an editor is finding light contemporary paranormal also a kick to write.

Oh…. Those sexy…. Werewolves.

Hi. My name is Linda Thomas-Sundstrom, and I’m a paranormal-a-holic.

To be more specific, I’m a werewolf-aholic.

You know, werewolves…. Those guys who run naked in the moonlight, with all that silver light cascading off their truly spectacular muscles. Those guys with backsides you could, if you dared, bounce a quarter off of? The ones who nip at your neck and make low growling noises when they’re excited or happy?

I’m addicted, big-time, to the idea of sexy, hot-blooded alphas with longish hair, incredible large light eyes of whatever color, and plenty of danger genes hot wired into their DNA. Yum! I like that these guys are for all intents and purposes normal most of the time, and only have three days per month, maybe less, when they cross over that line separating Human from Other. And I am so very lucky that I’ve been able to spend some time with these guys lately, with the promise of more contact in the future.

Barbie and the BeastYep, I’m a writer with a penchant for the furry side of the paranormal romance genre. Though I also write about vampires (Kensington Brava), one day I just decided I preferred warm — and werewolves hopped onto my pages. They’ve been there ever since.

There just seems to be a werewolf for every occasion, in my estimation. So I put them to paper as they appear. Need your lighter side ticked by some soft male fur? Need a laugh at the end of your day?

My quirky, girly, light-as-air paranormal romance “Barbie & the Beast” might be the ticket. It sure was fun for me to write. “Barbie & the Beast” hits bookstore shelves this April 1, published by Dorchester. The idea behind it? I loved the doll, but always felt sorry for her. Poor little Barbie never ever got Ken (Dream Wedding Barbie, Bridesmaid Barbie). So, I wondered, while staring at my original Barbie on my bookshelf, what would Barbie’s namesake, if she were a twenty-something Miami high school teacher, do to finally get her man? What sort of guy would my Barbie end up with? Answer — Darren Russell, part time graveyard caretaker, part time Miami PD consultant…. and part-time furball, as in werewolf. This scenario cracked me up.

And hey — Anyone here superstitious?
I think it might be fate that “Barbie & the Beast” is coming out on April Fool’s Day, and during the year of the Barbie doll’s 50th anniversary celebration. You just can’t beat it when strange event line up. Right? Only thing better would be if there was a full moon on April 1 !! Whoa.

Then there’s the darker side of my werewolfdom. The more dangerous hunks. I know them, too.

My first flirtation with darker Were tales was this past January’s Nocturne Bite titled “Blackout.” The story of two people meeting because of a wolf bite, and how one will help the other with her “transition” from human to the darker thing she will become.

Blackout I followed the January novella with February’s Nocturne Bite “Wolf Bait,” the story of another couple having to deal with a bite, and a transformation.

Super lucky me! These stories were then picked up by Silhouette Nocturne to kick off a series. And the next stories in this series will be full Nocturne books. I’m finishing the first of those full books right now, and loving the process in which the final book, book 5, will see all of the couples in the other 4 books and Bites coming together to take a criminal werewolf down.

I can’t begin to tell you what a great time I’m having getting to know the werewolves in Miami. Light or dark, fun or just plain spooky, there is a werewolf for every taste (no pun intended), and a story in each pair of those wolves’ golden eyes.

Okay. So, since this is werewolf month on this blog, and I’ve just confessed to my addiction. I do hope you’ll chat with me a little bit about the way you like your wolves. What makes you love them? Do you prefer the good guys? The bad boys? Long hair? Short hair? Brown? Blond?

Today, let’s run our own SURVEY. Shall we?

Do tell what your fantasies are. We can see which type of werewolf wins, and figure out what the winner looks like. Are you game ???????

Waiting to hear from you…
And though I won’t have any power at my house with which to access the internet, after this is posted, I’ll scoot myself down to the local library as soon as it’s open and read and respond. Sine I’m on the west coast, this might be later for you easterners. But do stay tuned. I’ll be here!

And if you’d like to see more about me and the books, please visit my web site at www.lindathomas-sundstrom.com

Looking forward to it.

Love,
Linda

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Thursday, March 26th, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves, There’s Something “Were” for Everyone

Full Moon of Werewolves Schedule

About today’s guest: Amy Wilkins
Amy Wilkins is Digital Production Coordinator at Harlequin. Among other things, she brings you Harlequin’s paranormal scoop on the Harlequin Paranormal Romance blog at www.paranormalromanceblog.com.

Confession: I don’t think I could fall in love with a werewolf. Why? I am, and always have been, afraid of dogs, especially the large, ferocious type. The idea of my man – even a drop-dead sexy one – turning into a big bad wolf… well, let’s just say that would keep me up at night…and not in the good way!

But luckily, even a cynophob like can still enjoy the werewolf genre, especially since books feature a wide variety of “were” creatures. For example, Rachel Vincent as her werecats series “The Shifters” with books Stray , Rogue, Pride , and Prey (coming in July). In the Silhouette Nocturne Bites line, we’ve had stories featuring a lynx shapeshifter in Claws of the Lynx by Linda O. Johnston and in May we’ll have a book about a woman who can change into a cheetah by Doranna Durgin called Wild Thing.

It’s not just cats who are getting the were treatment. It seems like every day I hear about a new species being brought into the shapeshifter genre. One of my favourite fantasy authors Juliet Marillier has two books in which characters transform into birds. I’ve even heard about a were-moose, a were-bear (try saying that three times fast), and a were-beaver! Apparently there must be a lot of shapeshifters in Canada.

All that being said, I DO understand the appeal of the classic werewolf – and appreciate how authors put their own unique stamp on the werewolf myth and bring variety into the genre. For starters, there are endless ways to explain how people become werewolves that go beyond the bite. Viruses, DNA, genetic experimentation are all explanations I’ve come across recently. Then there’s the characters – those amazing alpha heroes in particular. A werewolf can be the ultimate lone-wolf (literally) – tortured about his condition and afraid of hurting others, he retreats from the rest society to hunt and live alone…at least until he finds his mate. Or, he could be the leader of the pack, a natural leader who also takes care of his clan. Or he could be a man leading a double life, the seemingly regular guy who has kept had hidden his shapeshifting abilities until someone discovers his secret. Or…or…or…

Ultimately, the ability to shape and change the werewolf myth and introduce something totally new to the genre is what I think keeps bringing both authors and readers back to werewolf stories. Though werewolf myths have existed for centuries, as long as there are creative writers out there, the hunger for shapeshifters will never fade.

Plus, werewolves aren’t real…right?

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves: Excerpt from Caridad Piñeiro’s Undead Uprising & Prize!

Full Moon of Werewolves Schedule

About today’s guest: Caridad Piñeiro

Another Silhouette Nocturne author, Caridad Piñeiro, joins us today. Caridad is a multi-published and award-winning author whose love of the written word developed when her fifth grade teacher assigned a project -to write a book that would be placed in a class lending library. She has been hooked on writing ever since.

Today she gives us a sneak peak at her urban fantasy novel, Undead Uprising.

Also one lucky commenter will win a a SINS OF THE FLESH t-shirt along with a copy of TEMPTATION CALLS. Just leave a comment on this post to be entered. Winner will be announced at end of Full Moon promotion. Last day to enter Saturday, April 25th at midnight central U.S. time.

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***For Mature Audiences Only — Language, Violence and Some Sexual Content***

Chapter 1
New York City, June 2007

A good kill no longer brought satisfaction, only despair.

Pain lanced through Catalina de Villalobos’s side as she neared her latest victory. She raised her arm and glanced down at the four angry claw marks raked deep into her ribs. The vampire she had confronted that night had been a Wolverine wannabe, sporting a glove with razor sharp claws. Claws with which the vampire had successfully slashed through the protection of the leather jerkin she wore for battle.

Catalina ran a hand over the wound. It came away wet with blood.

Shit. Too much blood.

She nudged the body of her undead foe with the point of her polished black boot. Bent beside him to examine the claws. Picking up the vampire’s gloved hand, the gleam of silver shone bright in the moonlight along with the shock of blood along finely honed talons.

It explained why her wounds weren’t closing yet. The silver was messing with her body’s ability to heal. She couldn’t delay. Weakness slowly crept into her extremities from the loss of blood. She couldn’t afford that. The vamps would be out in force on a night like tonight, thinking they could have a vamp’s version of Mardi Gras before others like her emerged during the three days that were the height of the lunar cycle. When the werewolves came out to hunt, the smarter vampires retreated into their lairs for safety.

Ño, she said, cursing her stupidity at allowing the demon to get close enough to wound her. With that thought came a wave of wooziness, reminding her she couldn’t linger.

Hurrying, she removed the silver throwing knives from the vamp’s heart, wiped them clean on his shirt and then tucked them back into the leather vambrace along her left forearm.

She stood and glanced at the body. The moonlight illuminated the young vampire’s pale face. Barely out of his twenties human-age wise, but also fairly fresh to the undead life. She had sensed his power was not as strong as that of an older bloodsucker. That could explain the clawed glove he had added for protection. Newly turned, he had somehow become aware of the fact that he lacked the strength to defend himself against anything other than a human.

Guilt blossomed within her as she wondered whether the young man had chosen his undead life or been sired against his will. The latter made her hesitate until the vampire’s hand gave a sudden twitch, reminding her she had a job to finish. No matter how he had been turned, the end result was the same — a thirsty bloodsucker. She had stopped this one from draining an NYU coed he had dragged to the rooftop from the street below. The coed had fled, screaming, as soon as Catalina had arrived on the scene.

Funny, but she didn’t know if the coed had been more afraid of her in her human state and battle gear, or the vamp.

Easing her blade from the scabbard where she had sheathed it earlier, Catalina raised the Crusader’s sword high in the air, uttered a small prayer for the young man’s soul and hers, and then brought the blade rushing downward, cleaving the vampire’s head from his shoulders.

The body jumped one final time, confirming that the smaller silver knives had only slowed the demon. Her sword had finished the job. The morning sun would quickly dispose of any evidence of the kill.

She wiped down the sword on the vamp’s shirt. The silver-plated blade was as toxic to vamps as it was to those of her kind. A weakness the vamps had passed on to the werewolves they had inadvertently created.

Once back in its scabbard, she laid her hand on the leather wrapped hilt of the sword and the cross deeply engraved into the silver pommel glittered in the moonlight.

Somehow apropos, she thought. Her father had chosen a Crusader’s sword for her and Catalina formed part of the front lines of such a campaign. The cross a symbol of the righteous battling against immoral demons who no longer recognized any kind of god.

Once more despair rose up strongly within her. This would be the rest of her life, until one of the undead got luckier than the callow youth she had dispatched tonight.

Werewolf versus vampire. Catalina and her brethren against the unholy bloodsuckers.

Life was truly a bitch.

But it was her life, as much as she hated the fighting. Hated the lack of control that arose when the wolf took over her body.

Unlike the others of her kind, she was useless during the full moon which forced her to do her fighting the rest of the month. Every day of the rest of the month.

A wave of dizziness swept over her again, reminding her she would be useless for the remainder of the night. She needed to return home and heal.

She would never make it on foot. Too weak, she thought.

Hurrying down the fire escape, she slipped into an alleyway and rooted through the garbage cans, looking for something she could wrap herself in.

This might be New York City where anything went, but her weapons and the blood dripping down her side might raise an eyebrow on the subway. Finally, deep at the back of the alley, she encountered a homeless man beside a shopping cart brimming with possibilities.

In the dark of the alley, the whites of his eyes glowed with fright as he noted the weapons and the blood. He probably imagined that she had come for him.

“I won’t hurt you, old man,” she said in gentle tones, reached into a small pocket in her jerkin and tossed some money in his lap. “I just need a blanket.”

The man grabbed the money with gnarled fingers and motioned to the cart. “In there.”

Catalina rooted through the filth and debris of his life until she encountered a thin, dark grey blanket. One large enough to hide beneath. It smelled ripe — a good thing. The odor would mask the scent of her blood.

Wrapping the blanket around her, she strode from the alley and continued until she reached her goal — a loose grate above the subway stop. Easily shifting the grate even in her weakened state, she listened and tried to sense any physical signs of the subway. No clang of the tracks. No tremble of the ground beneath. She jumped down, landed at the edge of the tunnel and peered out.

A few humans, lingering as they waited for the train. She slipped unnoticed onto the platform. Huddled into the blanket and mumbling to herself, she walked toward the first pedestrian. As expected, the sharply dressed man’s face screwed up with disgust and he moved away so she could pass.

Good. Her act was working, especially when she wobbled like a drunk from the blood loss. She pressed onward, needing to be at the front of the train. In the tunnel beneath her clan’s building, the entrance to their lair lay beyond the head of the train. At that subway stop, smack in midtown Manhattan in a highly traveled area, she couldn’t risk drawing attention.

Especially when she might not be all that stable.

Weaker by the moment, she thought, as her vision wobbled out of focus. She struggled onward. Thanked whatever god there was when the subway pulled in moments later and she limped onto the train, plopped down at the first seat by the door.

The impact with the hard plastic brought pain. She moaned, covered it by mumbling a little louder, driving yet another few passengers from her side. That and the pungent smell from the blanket.

Each jostle of the train brought renewed pain. The claws must have dug deeper than she realized. The warmth of her blood bathed her side. Her nose twitched involuntarily as that smell began to overwhelm her wolfen senses.

She risked a glance to see if anyone else had noticed, but they were all busy ignoring her. Another typical day in New York City, she thought.

Multiple stops passed until with what seemed like a bone-jarring thud, the subway reached her destination. She rose, stumbled off onto the platform. There were more people here, but luckily, they were all headed in the opposite direction toward the exits that would put them closer to Rockefeller Center and Radio City.

The Villalobos building was directly above, an impressive fifty story building on New York’s Sixth Avenue. The first forty stories housed the vast complex of businesses that made up Villalobos Industries. The top ten floors housed rooms for the clan business and the home of Rafael de Villalobos, her father, and all his children and wives.

She snuck quickly into a tunnel, leaned on the wall heavily as she labored to reach what everyone supposed was a service shaft for the subway.

Only it wasn’t.

It had been put there by her father nearly twenty years earlier as an emergency entrance. At the rusty and banged up metal door, she placed her hand over what looked like a plain old square stone, but was actually a biometric reading device. Bright laser light read her palm and a second later, the decrepit-looking door slid open with a smooth whoosh.

She stumbled in and dropped the blanket, unable to bear its stench for a moment longer.

The clan’s physician, Ramon Santander, waited for her. “The guards told me you were on your way.”

As he finally noticed her condition, he rushed to her side to offer support. “You’re hurt.” He gently raised her left arm to triage her injuries.

Weaker by the second, Catalina laid a hand on his shoulder to steady herself. “It’s not healing. Silver.”

With a nod, he picked her up into his arms and strode with her to the elevator. She nestled her head on Ramon’s chest, snuggling into his warmth since a chill had settled into her body. His strength and calm washed over and she finally relaxed her guard. Being strong all the time wore her down. Only with Ramon could she allow herself some weakness.

The alpha wolves of the clan would try to take advantage of that weakness. Attempt to assume control over her. Ramon would not do the same. First, because he was human. Second, because he cared for her. Or at least, she suspected he cared for her.

Once inside the special infirmary for her family, Ramon laid her on the examining table. Quickly and almost impersonally, he removed her leather jerkin to reveal the four ugly and deep slices along her ribs. Almost to the bone, she realized.

Ramon probed at the wounds gently with his fingers, but she still winced from the pressure. With the danger of the battle over, she could finally allow the pain to bring the unwanted sexual desire that seemed to be part of her unusual legacy.

“Perdoname,” he said in apology and stepped away from the table to assemble the needed tools and medications on a smaller rolling cart.

“No need to apologize,” Catalina said as she shifted to her side, one arm draped across her breasts, suddenly modest despite her growing sexual need. Ramon had seen her naked when he guarded her during the full moon. Touched her, only they weren’t lovers, despite her wishing for that more times than was wise.

Ramon must have sensed her interest since he became distant. As a human saved by the pack from a vamp attack, he had sworn to keep their secrets and heal their wounds in exchange for his life. Due to his position at the bottom of the Villalobos hierarchy, the other wolves would never tolerate him as the mate of their future leader.

But she would risk the censure of the pack. She wanted him that badly. She needed to imagine a normal life was possible for her. That hope was all that kept her going at times.

When Ramon returned to the table, he said, “I’d give you something for the pain, only — ”

“We never know what it’ll do,” she finished for him. A familiar statement when it came to her unique metabolism. Within their number, she was an oddity — a wolf who couldn’t control her altered state; one who couldn’t handle human medicines while in her normal state. Despite that, she could tolerate a greater amount of pain and had incredible strength while in human form, unlike the other werewolves who had to wait until the full moon to be at their strongest.

“It’s okay. I can deal,” she said and shifted her arm to allow him access to the injury.

Ramon cleansed the wound to remove any traces of the silver and then worked on closing up the deeper portions of the gashes. She sucked in a deep breath and focused on driving away any sensation of pain. As he tended to her, Ramon spoke to her in softly, which helped her keep her distress — and passion — in check.

“How did this happen?”

“Young vamp had claws.” She winced at one pull of the needle as he stitched.

“An armed vampire? They seem to be growing bolder.”

She shrugged and he admonished her to stay still. Glancing downward, she could see him working, feel the pinch and tug as he closed her wounds. “They must be tired of being attacked, both during the cycle and off.”

“Rumor has it they’re banding together. Warning the newly turned about you,” he said and reached for something on the table.

His comment made her rise and face him, the stitches in her side pulling with the movement. “Where did you hear that?”

“Hemmerich. He was with your father today in his chambers. He, too, had been hunting earlier. Only he wasn’t as lucky as you,” Ramon replied and returned to working on her side, his gaze uneasy as it darted to her breasts, and then back up to her face.

At least he had noticed her, she thought, sitting before him, her arms at her sides to expose herself.

Let him look, she thought. And touch. With her wounds tended, her strength slowly returned to normal and she finally released the passion that came from a battle well fought and the pain of her injuries.

It occurred to her that maybe some fickle god, knowing that pain would rule her life, had decided that in exchange pleasure should come with it. That the torment of becoming the wolf would bring fulfillment in those final moments before she lost control.

She cared for neither.

“Hemmerich is a fool. He’s not as strong as I am in his human state.”

Ramon tried to avoid looking at her, but it proved impossible to ignore perfection. Especially when it sat before him, inviting his touch. He reined in his desire and calmly said, “You’re right. The vampire who got Hemmerich earlier tonight had a friend with him. They managed to slice up Hemmerich before he dispatched one of them.”

“Only one?” She arched one finely waxed brow arched to emphasize the question.

He nodded, eased her arm away from her side again and finished dressing the gashes although some parts of them were already healed. “The second vampire fled when he realized he would have to fight Hemmerich alone.”

When he finished, he tenderly smoothed his hand over the gauze and tape, angry that she had been hurt. Worried at the discussion he had overheard in her father’s chambers earlier that night. He couldn’t fool her since she must have sensed his disquiet.

“What else is there? I can tell from your face that’s not the only bad news for the night.”

With a tired sigh, he laid his hands on either side of her on the examination table. Raising his face, he met her almost defiant gaze. “Your twenty-fifth birthday is in a few months.”

“And?” she replied with a regal tilt to her auburn-haired head. An appropriate posture considering that as the eldest child of the alpha wolf, she would be the next in line to rule the Villalobos clan unless someone challenged her position. Only no one would be stupid enough to do that. Even in her human state, Catalina was stronger and smarter than the best of the alpha males in the pack. She was the only choice to lead them once her father was gone, which would not be for quite some time. Rafael de Villalobos was only in his early fifties, and amazingly hale and hearty. But that didn’t mean that the rites of ascendancy shouldn’t begin.

“You’re father is talking about holding the Gauntlet to choose your mate.” Although he tried to hide the despair in his voice, he failed miserably, which only served to bring a tender smile to Catalina’s mouth.

She cupped his cheek and ran her thumb across his lips. “You know that there is only one mate I would choose.”

With a harsh sigh, he said, “I am forbidden to you.”

His words tugged painfully at Catalina’s heart since as much as she wished to deny it, he was right. As a mortal, he could not be the consort for someone who would one day head the pack. The rules of the clan made it clear that only the strongest alpha could be her life partner.

But that didn’t stop her need or the attraction she felt for him. Lowering her hand to his shoulder, she urged him closer until the tips of her breasts brushed his chest. They hardened immediately, accompanied by a surge in the passion that had been simmering within from her injuries. He would have pulled away, but she exerted pressure on his shoulder.

“I want you.”

“This can bring nothing but pain,” he urged and once again made a motion to leave her, but she increased the strength of her hold.

“I want to make love with you,” she beseeched, but his face was harsh as he answered.

“Is that a command or can I refuse?” he said, raising the differences in their ranks as a last resort. They both knew he couldn’t refuse her if it was a command since he had sworn his obedience in exchange for his life. Normally she wasn’t one to take advantage of that vow, but if a command was what it would take for him to make love with her tonight, Catalina wouldn’t be honorable.

She moved closer and nuzzled his face with hers, trailing her lips along the straight line of his jaw. “Can you refuse me?” she asked as she hovered near the edge of his lips until he turned his face that fraction of an inch to meet her gaze.

“What do you think?” Ramon said, but knew that no answer was needed as he met her lips with his and gripped the back of her head.

She might be forbidden and get furry a few nights each month, but that wasn’t enough to keep him from wanting her like he had never wanted any other woman. Catalina knew it and took advantage of his weakness.

And he didn’t care, he thought as he slipped his arms around her body and pressed her close.

The power of her rippled beneath his hands, her lithe muscles strong. The heat of her animal side warmed his palms as her passion rose and his own, almost puny human desire answered.

Over and over he kissed her lips. Slipped his tongue into her mouth and tasted the sweetness of her breath. The smoothness of her perfect teeth which soon would become fangs sharp enough to tear him to bits. Again it came to him that this was insanity.

Destiny demanded that she be the next pack leader and giving into this would only cause problems for her. Hurt her.

He cared for her too much to be the source of such anguish and gently eased her away.

A knock came at the door.

Catalina made a face of annoyance. “Ignore it. Maybe they’ll go away,” she said, wishing to continue with their encounter.

“Catalina, this can’t — ”

The knock came again, more insistent this time and followed by her mother’s hushed, but concerned voice.

“Mi’ja. You’re father has requested that you come to his study.”

Catalina was tempted to defy her father, only she had no doubt that he wanted to talk about the Gauntlet and Hemmerich’s failure that night, both topics she eagerly wanted to learn more about.

“I have to go.”

She dropped a quick kiss on his lips and wrapping the sheet from the examining table around her, she hurried to the door and opened it. Her mother waited there, anxiously wringing her hands together at Catalina’s delay.

“Mami.” She acknowledged her mother’s presence with a bow of her head.

Her mother didn’t look her in the eye as she lowered her head. Even between mother and child, rank in the pack still demanded certain actions. “Mi’ja. Your father is waiting for you.”

“Let him wait, mami. I need to dress.”

Her mother’s gaze darted uneasily to Ramon and maternal instinct overrode the pack’s rules about challenging a superior wolf. “This,” her mother began, finally raising her head and motioning with her hand in Ramon’s direction, “is unwise, mi’ja.”

“I should go,” Ramon said and started to walk away.

“Don’t,” she commanded and he obeyed, inclining his head in acknowledgement. His body posture confirming her authority over him.

She stood before her mother, who looked back down and almost cowered. She hated seeing her mother this way. Even more, she hated her role in causing her mother’s fall from her alpha position.

“Mami,” she said and laid a gentle hand on her mother’s shoulder. Her mother didn’t pick up her head, but shot her a shrouded half glance.

“You are my mother. My equal. I appreciate your concern for me, but Ramon . . .”

She glanced back at the man she wished to be her lover as he stood waiting. A grim smile marred his face, for he knew that many of the pack’s rules troubled her. “I care for him.”

“Your father is calling — ”

“For the Gauntlet. I know,” she jumped in and at her words, her mother’s head shot up in surprise. “Let’s go see papi,” she said and strode from the infirmary to her bedroom, just a few doors down.

“He will not change his mind about the human,” her mother warned as she chased after her.

Her father occasionally indulged her in different ways, but she knew, much as her mother cautioned, that he would not be dissuaded. But then again, neither would she.

She had already given her heart to Ramon. Nothing her father said or did would change what she felt.

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Tuesday, March 24th, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves, Excerpt Rebecca York’s Eternal Moon

Full Moon of Werewolves Schedule

About today’s guest: Rebecca York

New York Times, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly best-selling
and award-winning author, Rebecca York joins us today. Rebecca has written over 115 books. Her many awards include two Rita finalist books and two Career Achievement awards from Romantic Times: for Series Romantic Suspense and for Series Romantic Mystery. Her Peregrine Connection series also won a Lifetime Achievement Award for Romantic Suspense Series.

Today she gives us a peak at her novel, ETERNAL MOON.

What woman could possibly be a match for a guy who has the sexual pull, animal magnetism and power of a werewolf? I’ve confronted that problem over and over in my Moon series. Often I’ve given my heroines powers that few mortals possess. And in ETERNAL MOON, I’ve gone even farther. Renata Cordona is the reincarnation of an ancient goddess. She and her lover have met again and again down through the ages–only to be destroyed by a demon bent on conquering the world.

In her twenty-first century incarnation, Renata hooks up with werewolf, Jacob Marshall. And maybe this time a werewolf and a goddess can defeat the demon–if they can conquer the mistrust that springs up between them every time they come together.

Here’s the beginning of their story. In a traditional romance, the h/h “meet cute.” My werewolf heroes and their ladies usually “meet dangerously.”

CHAPTER ONE

Eternal Moon, Rebecca York
Renata Cordona touched the Glock model twenty-eight concealed at the small of her back.

She might be waiting in an empty house for a man who could be a killer, but she wasn’t going to end up dead-like the three women who had been murdered in the past nine months.

“Come on,” she muttered, pulling out the contact page she’d printed and reading the guy’s name. “. . . Mr. Lanagan. Why are you late? Are you playing mind games with me?”

Once again, she looked out a front window of the converted farmhouse, but she saw no cars coming up the long driveway.

Kurt Lanagan had phoned Star Realty a few days ago, asking to see properties with several acres of land around them. That fit the MO of the murderer, so she was masquerading as a real estate agent, with the proviso that if she actually did end up selling anything, the money would go to the company’s owner, Dick Trainer.

Which was fine with her. She wasn’t doing this for money. She hadn’t gone into PI work for money. She could sit back and collect interest and dividend checks from her parents’ estate for the rest of her life and not have to worry about supporting herself.

But from her earliest years back in Costa Rica, she’d felt like she should try to make a difference. Whatever that meant, exactly.

So here she was, in an empty house, dressed in a baby blue pantsuit and open-toed high-heeled shoes, feeling like Andromeda chained to a rock, waiting for the sea monster to come and get her. She ran a nervous hand through her long hair, then flipped it back over her shoulder, unsure why her mind had leaped to that image. But it was a dark vision-and she needed the sunlight. Stepping out the front door into the spring afternoon, she looked up at the sunshine filtering through the leaves of the oaks and poplars that someone had planted here fifty years ago.

With narrowed eyes, she checked her watch again. Where was Lanagan? Was he one of those jerks who thought only his own time was valuable? Or was he lost?

Well, he had her cell phone number if he needed directions.

Striding down the driveway, she walked toward the detached garage. When she realized she was counting the steps, she stopped herself. It didn’t matter how many steps she had to take. The important point was that the garage was a little far from the house to be convenient, and she should have checked it out-since Mr. Lanagan could be a legitimate customer.

That thought made her firm her lips. She was focusing on the murder part of this assignment and forgetting that she also had to play a convincing real estate agent, who would obviously have paid attention to the selling points of the house and surrounding property.

Let’s see. She’d taken a good look at the kitchen. It had been updated-but maybe not recently enough to go with the $850K asking price.

She was almost to the garage when movement in the woods made her stop. With a jolt, she turned. Had she and the police totally misread the killer’s method of stalking his victims? Was he coming on foot to isolated locations where female agents were showing houses?

All that ran through her mind before she realized it wasn’t a man at all-but a dog. A Rottweiler, she guessed.

He looked large and dangerous, and her blood ran cold when she saw he wasn’t alone.

Behind him, five more dogs stepped out of the underbrush. They were all about his size. One looked like a Shepherd mix. Another was a Doberman. And the remaining two appeared to have at least half pit bull genes.

What they had in common was the menacing look in their eyes.

Did they belong to someone? Or were they a feral pack? Inspecting them more closely, she saw that half of them didn’t appear to be wearing collars-which weren’t reassuring.

Bent on getting out of their way, she took two quick steps to the side door of the garage-and twisted the knob. Unfortunately it was locked, and she remembered that the key was lying on the counter in the kitchen-along with the key to the house.

Good going, Renata!

The Rottweiler, who appeared to be the leader of the pack, started barking. The others followed suit.

Then, they broke off as quickly as they’d begun.

Somehow, that abrupt silence was more threatening than the previous noise.

The leader bared its teeth and snarled at her. The others did the same.

They were maybe sixty feet away, but she could clearly hear them growling.

Instinctively, she knew they were out for blood-her blood–and she was no match for them.

Her heart thumping inside her chest, she drew her gun. She’d never shot a dog, or any other animal, in her life. And the idea of doing it now made her sick, but that might be her only chance to get out of here alive.

Would a warning shot scare them away-or send them charging toward her?

Desperately, her mind scrambled for what she remembered about canines. You weren’t supposed to challenge a dangerous dog by looking him in the eye. And you weren’t supposed to show fear.

Yeah, right.

Should she try to run back to the house? Or should she walk?

Without turning around, she took a step back and then another, keeping her gaze slightly to the side of the pack. Still, she saw the leader raise his head, as the growling turned to a low rumble.

She knew in that terror-filled moment that they were going to charge her.

CHAPTER TWO

Just before the pack could attack, a larger dog came dashing out of the woods. As her gaze swung to him, she took in details in a split second. The pointed ears. The long, upturned tail. The dark gray fur along his back and flanks that gradually lightened as it reached his lower body and legs.

Was he a dog-or a wolf?

Her heart still pounding, she did a fast recalculation. A wolf in the Maryland woods? Was that possible?

Well, she’d heard of coyotes returning to this area. So why not a wolf?

Whatever he was, she saw how the others reacted to him.

Moments ago they’d looked ready to tear her to pieces. They were still agitated, but in a different way. Somehow the newcomer had changed the equation, taking over the position of alpha male in the pack-within seconds of his arrival.

He faced the others squarely, his chest forward, his teeth bared, his tail puffed and standing straight out, as he stepped between her and the feral animals–growling a warning.

In that moment she sensed that he had told the pack she was his property, and he would tear any dog apart who dared to get near her.

He was alone, and there were six of them, but all of the other dogs had changed their stance. Their tails and heads were down.

When the newcomer pressed forward, the others backed up.

He kept advancing, challenging all of them at once, and continuing with his calm aggression.

Then, everything changed. As if someone had flipped a switch, the former leader turned tail and ran, and the others followed his lead.

Her rescuer stood watching them disappear into the woods. His stance was still aggressive, but she saw a slight relaxation in his posture. Probably he was pretty sure that he’d chased them away, but he was waiting-just in case they came back. Long seconds ticked by. Then a minute. Then another. Finally he turned and gazed at her.

She caught her breath as she took in the handsome features-his light gray facial fur contrasting with his dark nose and intelligent blue eyes, rimmed with dark margins.

She waited for frozen moments, caught by the notion that he was going to speak to her. Of course, no words came out of his mouth, only a low growl that she took to mean, “Get back in the house while the getting’s good.”

“Yes,” she answered. Then added, “Thank you for chasing them away.”

He nodded as though he understood her, then growled again, this time more sharply.

“Okay.” She spun on her heel and dashed back down the driveway, running as fast as she could in the high heels.

When she reached the front porch, she turned and looked back, expecting to see him standing where she had left him, but he had silently vanished into the woods.

Stepping to the house, she closed the front door behind her, then leaned back against the barrier, breathing hard. Her narrow escape was sinking in, and the primitive part of her brain knew those dogs would have torn her apart if the big gray wolf hadn’t arrived.

Wolf. Yes, he had to be a wolf.
* * * * *

Werewolf Jacob Mashall breathed out a sigh. When he’d seen the dogs getting ready to attack Renata Cordona, his heart had stopped.

He’d faced them down. And he could have followed them. Instead he headed in the other direction-toward a spot about a hundred yards from the house, where he found what he’d scented when he first arrived. Raw meat, dumped on the ground. Meat that had attracted the animals.

What the hell was seven pounds of chuck steak doing out here on this property? It looked like someone had deliberately put it there to lure the dogs.

He turned and stared toward the house-and stopped short. The Latin beauty he’d saved was standing at the front window staring out. Looking for the dog pack? Or looking for the wolf that had saved her?

He took a quick step back, then another, fading into the woods. It wouldn’t do him any good to confront her now-not when he couldn’t talk to her.

He’d met her several times over the past few months. She was a real estate agent who had come to some of the meetings of the citizens group concerned about funding of essential country services in the face of the economic downturn.

He’d noticed her right away. There was something about her oval face, her dark eyes with their fringe of sooty lashes, her full lips, and that marvelous long, dark hair of hers that called to him in a way he couldn’t explain-except in the most basic terms of sexual attraction.

No, it was more than that. He kept fighting the uncanny feeling that he’d held her in his arms before. Mated with her before. Declared his undying love–although none of that could possibly be true, since they’d met only briefly

The fantasy had been alarming enough to keep him from asking her out, but as soon as he’d seen she was in trouble, he’d taken the risk of stepping between her and those dogs. Now he had to make sure she was all right.

Unaccountably restless and out for a run in wolf form, he’d passed a “For Sale” sign down at the entrance to the driveway. Not long after seeing the sign, he’d picked up the scent of the dogs. Then he’d felt the dangerous vibrations coming off of them.

If he’d had to articulate what he’d sensed, he wouldn’t have been able to put it in terms a human could understand, but he could have described it to the other Marshall men, his bothers and cousins who also carried the werewolf gene.

While he could have told them how he knew about the dogs and the danger they represented, he couldn’t have explained exactly what he had done to make them break off the attack on Renata. For him, it was more than a canine face-off.

In his childhood, he’d discovered he had the ability to communicate with animals in ways that his brothers and cousins did not possess. He relied on that special talent in his job, working with dogs at various pounds, shelters and training facilities around the area. And he’d used it in the past to talk dangerous animals out of attacking-one or two at a time. But he’d never tried to dominate a pack of six dogs before.

Thank God it had worked.

Now he wanted to know who the hell had put that meat there and if it had anything to do with Renata-specifically.

But he’d left his house as a wolf, and when he changed to human form, he’d be naked.

He could run home, of course, but she might not even be here when he got back, because his house was five miles away.

As he contemplated the problem, a solution leaped into his mind. A quarter mile from here, behind a rectangular cinder block house, he’d seen a clothesline with a wash flapping in the breeze. He retraced his steps, until he reached the spot, then waited for long moments, breathing in the scents that surrounded the house.

Human sweat and motor oil. Burnt rubbish and laundry detergent.

As far as he could tell, no one was outside. Still, when he broke through the cover of the woods, he approached with caution. He was able to snag an almost dry pair of sweatpants and a tee shirt off the line. After stashing them in the woods, he went back for the muddy sneakers sitting by the back door. But as he darted in to get the shoes, a guy with a shotgun came barreling out of the house.

Jacob could have leaped forward and knocked him down. But he hated the idea of adding insult and injury to theft, since the man was only defending his property from a marauding animal, at least from his point of view.

When he saw the gun, he turned tail and ran, glad that he’d had the foresight to drop the clothing back in the trees. Still, he heard an angry shout from the man, followed by a shotgun blast behind him. Thankfully, none of the pellets hit him.

Stopping to scoop up the clothing in his mouth, he hightailed it farther into the underbrush, praying that the homeowner didn’t think the laundry was worth chasing him. Because then they would have a fight on their hands.

When he thought he was safe, he stopped behind a tangle of honeysuckle, breathing hard and listening for sounds of pursuit. Finally sure he wasn’t being followed, he began to say the words of the ancient chant that transformed the men of his family from wolf to man-and back again. Of course, as a wolf, he couldn’t speak them aloud. But he said them in his head.

Taranis, Epona, Cerridwen.

Once he’d finished the phrase, he repeated it and went on to another.

Ga. Feart. Cleas. Duais. Aithriocht. Go gcumhdai is dtreorai na deithe thu.

The men of his family had passed those words down from father to son from generation to generation. His cousin, Ross, had told him they were Celtic in origin and had theorized that one of their ancestors had been a Druid priest who had asked the gods for special powers-and had gotten more than he had bargained for.

He’d spawned a race at odds with the rest of humankind. And he’d created werewolves who were loners-because each of them was an alpha male. Which made them head of their own packs.

Until Ross had changed the equation. He’d figured out how to get his brothers and his cousins to work together, although there was always going to be friction among the Marshalls.

Today Jacob was alone-the way he liked it. Once he had transformed, he pulled on the stolen pants, then the shirt and started back to the house, wishing that he’d also gotten the shoes. But that wasn’t going to stop him from speaking to Renata while the incident was fresh in her mind.
* * * * *

A flash of movement outside had Renata reaching for her Glock again. Gun in hand, she watched a man coming up the road. With a jolt of recognition, she saw that it was Jacob Marshall. She’d met him at a couple of Howard County citizens meetings. But he’d never done more than exchange a few words with her. Now he was striding toward the house like he owned it.

When he knocked at the door, she thought about pretending that no one was home. Then the knock came again, more insistent than before, and she thought he had probably spotted her through the window. It was strange that he was showing up here-and now. After hesitating for a moment, she slipped the gun out of its holster and into the shoulder bag she was carrying.

When she opened the door and stepped outside, a look she couldn’t read washed over his face.

“What?” she asked.

“Are you all right?”

“Why shouldn’t I be?”

He hesitated for a moment, as though he hadn’t thought through the reason he was standing here, facing her. Finally he said,

“I heard dogs barking. It sounded like someone might be in trouble.”

She didn’t remember a lot of noise. At any rate, it had happened almost twenty minutes ago.

“If you were worried about barking, why did it take you so long to get here?” she asked.

He looked back over his shoulder, as though the answer to the question lay in the woods.

When he spoke, it took her several moments to work her way through what he was saying.

“I . . . found some meat.”

“What?”

He gestured behind him and to his right. “Over there in the woods. Someone had spread around a bunch of raw meat on the ground.”

“Why”

“To lure the dogs here, I think.”

“That’s crazy.”

“How many were there?” he asked.

“Six.”

“Who knew you were going to be here alone?”

“There’s a record of it at the real estate office. And I’m meeting a client.”

He glanced over his shoulder, his gaze falling on her car-which was the only one parked near the house. “I guess he must be late.”

“What business is that of yours?” she asked, thinking that he had somehow put her on the defensive, and she needed to take control of the conversation. Then before he could answer that question, she noticed something quite odd.

“Where are your shoes?”

He looked down, and she could see his shoulders tense. “I was out for a run.”

“Barefoot?”

“Uh huh.”

She gave him a disbelieving stare.
* * * * *

“Yes, why are you barefoot?” a grating voice asked. The question wasn’t spoken by Renata-or anyone in the vicinity. It came from a man several miles from the scene. Or to be more accurate, someone who looked like a man. But he was much more-a being with powers far beyond those of mere humans, and one was the ability to view what was happening between Renata and Jacob Marshall without being there in person.

His name was Questabaze. At least, that was his demon name. Of course he didn’t go by anything so strange-sounding in the human world. Over the centuries, he’d worn many different identities. And the one he had now was perfectly designed to allow him to fit into the society where his quarry lived.

Renata’s world. Where the air didn’t burn your lungs when you took a breath and your bed was a soft mattress rather than a field of sharp rocks. He had fought for the honor and the privilege of being here. Fought his brothers-and won. And he would win so much more when the great dance of power finally came to an end.

As the couple confronted each other in this isolated location, Questabaze felt a flicker of anger course through him. Too bad the dogs hadn’t done their work. They’d been about to maul Renata. To rip her face to shreds.

But it hadn’t worked out that way. He’d waited with quivering anticipation for the attack. Instead that other animal had come trotting out of the woods and forced the pack to back off with their tails between their legs.

Questabaze wasn’t sure how the animal had done it. Not with the odds stacked against him. Or even why he’d come charging out of the woods to protect Renata.

But she’d run back to the house-safe and sound. Now she was talking to Jacob Marshall-of all people–when she shouldn’t be in condition to talk to anyone.

He’d seen their attraction for each other, and he’d decided he’d been wrong in the past. Jacob Marshall was her true mate. He had to be. They’d met-as destiny dictated. And it was up to Questabaze to make sure their relationship got totally fouled up-one way or the other.

Too bad they were alone together after her narrow escape.

“Fuck!”

Such a satisfying expletive for such a basic human act. Why should it offend people when it was one of the basic pleasures of this world?

The word was one of the many variations he’d learned over the centuries. In German it was ficken. In Norwegian fukka. In Spanish chingar. And perhaps the current English verb had been derived from the Irish bot. Still, no matter where it had come from, it made such a nasty guttural sound.

He said it again. Which only lowered his stress level a couple of notches. A satisfying sound wasn’t what he needed. He needed results.

Of course, there had been other men who had seemed to be candidates for the role of Renata’s true consort.

He’d had to watch as each of the men met her. After they’d gotten involved with her, he’d wiped them off the face of the earth, thinking that he’d accomplished his mission. Then, each time, he’d come to the conclusion that the relationship had been a false alarm. Too bad they’d had to die to prove him wrong.

And too bad his end run hadn’t worked just now. But even without the help of the dogs, he would win another round in the great game of power.

Always in the past, after his victory, the cycle had started over again, but he could feel the finish vibrating just out of reach.

“And I will have the final triumph,” he promised himself, because it was the only outcome he could allow. He had worked too hard. Dared too much. Yet even as he made the vow, something was still nagging at him.

How had Jacob Marshall known Renata was here? Had he followed her? Or was he checking up on her?

It wasn’t possible for Questabaze to observe Marshall on his own, the way he could sometimes do with Renata. She was his focus, although he couldn’t watch her every minute because he had to put in time maintaining his human persona.

When the scene in his mind began to waver, he realized he had lost his concentration. With another curse, he clawed to hang onto the vision.

He was a being of great cunning and great power. But there were limits to his potency. Despite his efforts, the image snapped off, and he was left staring at a blank wall. His anger flared, making a pile of leaves outside his window smolder.

With a flick of his hand, he shot them a blast of cold.

He rarely had trouble deciding what course of action to take, but now he hesitated.

Should he get into his car and drive over there? He certainly had an excuse for appearing. Or was that exactly the wrong thing to do? Would he just make Renata suspicious?

From ETERNAL MOON, by Ruth Glick, writing as Rebecca York.
Publication Date: April 2009
Copyright © 2009 by Ruth Glick. This edition published by arrangement with Berkley Books


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Monday, March 23rd, 2009
Full Moon of Werewolves: Learning to Love the Wolf! (& Prize!)

Full Moon of Werewolves Schedule

About today’s guest: Michele Hauf
Michele has been writing romance, action-adventure and fantasy stories for over fifteen years, but as you will see below she wasn’t born with her current love of werewolves. She is, however, willing to share it with you. One lucky commenter will win a copy of THE DEVIL TO PAY and a chocolate. Just leave a comment on this post to be entered. Winner will be announced at end of Full Moon promotion. Last day to enter Saturday, April 25th at midnight central U.S. time.

I never used to like werewolves. Heck, I fear dogs, so you can imagine werewolves give me the heebie-jeebies. I admit I haven’t read any werewolf stories. My fears are based entirely on what I’ve gleaned from the silver screen.

My fear of shapeshifting wolves started with the movie An American Werewolf in London. amwerelondon
It came out in 1981. I was…15 at the time. My mind was young, unblemished by silver screen horror; I’d never seen blood and guts—ever. You may look back on that movie now and laugh (CGI has advanced movie effects SO greatly) but let me tell you, that movie scarred me. I can still vividly recall the werewolf ripping out some woman’s throat and leaving her mangled on the grass. Hey, I creep out easily. Don’t even mention Silence of The Lambs to me unless you want to see me faint.

madatthemoonSo my first brush with the wolf was not a good one. Follow that up with the goofy Teen Werewolf movies starring Michael J Fox, which just had me shaking my head, and I’ve avoided lycanthropes until very recently.

Although, there was an interesting sleeper that came out in 1992, Mad At The Moon, starring Mary Sue Masterson. It was a romance with a western setting. The movie was very cautious with the whole werewolf theme, utilizing the romance amazingly well. I was actually riveted. Hmm…I thought, maybe the hairy guys are not so bad after all?

I didn’t think much about werewolves until I stumbled onto the Canadian television cult-hit teen show, Big Wolf On Campus.
bigwolf (I know, really dorky wolf costume, right? I think that was the point of the show though, to laugh at itself.) Dorky and goofy and utterly weird, this show featured a college boy who was also a werewolf trying to simply fit in. But it was his goth friend with crazy knowledge of every paranormal creature that ever existed, Merton Dingle, who stole the show, so I can’t claim I watched it because of the wolf.

Then came the movie Underworld. I went for the vampires; I fell in love with the werewolves. Blame it on Michael Sheen’s amazing portrayal of Lucien, the werewolf we all thought was the villain until we got a glimpse of his heart-wrenching past. The man just does werewolf so well, doesn’t he? lucienUber sexy, if you ask me. It was around that time I’d begun working on my Bewitch the Dark series that featured vampires and witches. I tossed a werewolf in there for a few pages, just to show that they also inhabited my ‘world’. Okay, so I’d gotten over my creep-out for werewolves thanks to Lucien, but I still didn’t want to write a full story about the hairy critters. Back hair, eww.

I also have to mention the excellent Blood & Chocolate (movie version) which further lured me into some kind of wolf-love for the hairy dudes. Okay, all right, already! So werewolves are lovable, too. And heck, they don’t have that nasty habit of sucking on your neck like vampires. In fact, I think they can be very playful and fiercely protective of their mates.

So I succumbed. I wrote a novella about a werewolf, “Racing The Moon”, which is currently feature in the MIDNIGHT CRAVINGS anthology from Silhouette. Midnight Cravings I wanted to explore what happens with werewolves and the full moon thing. Do they freak out? Start killing? Stalk cattle? Howl at the moon? Or maybe they get amorous? I have to say, I loved my wolf, Dean Maverick, in that short story so much, I then had to write a full-length novel for one of the hairy blokes. MOON KISSED comes out this September, and features Severo (who was the cameo-appearance wolf in KISS ME DEADLY). And then I wrote another; HER VAMPIRE HUSBAND features a female werewolf forced to marry a vampire, for my November release.

I’ve come a long way from An American Werewolf In London. But I still don’t want to watch that movie ever again. [shudder]

Read more about Michele’s werewolves (and vampires) at michelehauf.com

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