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Toran Teaser Tuesday

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A Paranormal Women’s Fiction Novella

(Unbound, Book 7)

 

Paranormal Women’s Fiction

Publication Date:
January 19, 2024

Publisher: Changeling Press LLC

 

 

Toran Bladewielder’s life was upended when a battle injury forced him
to leave his order — the Holy Defenders of the Gods. It is upended again
when he catches a thief pilfering food from the warehouse he is guarding.
Although the miscreant turns out to be a beautiful woman, his duty is to
hand her over to the authorities.

But when he discovers she is a slave who escaped from a ship in the harbor,
his sense of right and wrong urges him to hide her.

Desperate to maintain her freedom, Farah will do anything escape the
clutches of her cruel master — even seduce a man whose sexual innocence and
moral decency are clear to her.

But as she angles to keep Toran on her side, their relationship heats up.
Neither expected to ever find love, yet the intensity between them builds —
until Lord Camari’s men find Farah and drag her back to him for
punishment. Can Toran rescue her, and is there any way for these unlikely
lovers can forge a lasting relationship?

 

EXCERPT

Toran Unbound

Rebecca York

All rights reserved.

Copyright ©2024 Rebecca York

 

Toran Bladewielder lurked in the darkness of the warehouse, determined to
catch the thief who had been stealing foodstuffs from recent shipments.
Repressing a wince of pain, he leaned back against the building’s
rough stone wall to ease the ache in his leg. Six months ago, he had been a
Holy Defender — a member of the religious order which preserved the
authority of the gods. Then in a battle far from home, he had been struck
down by a blow from an infidel.

The injury to his leg had made him unfit for military service, and he had
been unceremoniously shipped back to his home monastery. There he had been
given a choice — accept the menial jobs of tending the garden and preparing
food for his brothers — or leave the order. After the exhilaration of
battle, he was unable to envision a life of such work. With a heavy heart,
he had chosen to renounce his vows.

For months he had felt like a brigantine without a rudder, adrift on an
unknown sea, until his old schoolmate Gareth Lamb had offered him a
guard’s job in one of the Glencarn warehouses that he and Prince
Gawain owned. It was a far cry from his former holy mission, but at least it
was work that could utilize some of his fighting skills.

When he wasn’t at his post, he was working to strengthen his ruined
leg. The combination kept him from tipping over the edge into the black
despair that had threatened to swallow him whole.

It had been a routine job — until the last few days. Now he had a real
puzzle to solve. No one had been able to catch the sneak thief helping
himself to a recent shipment of foodstuffs from far off Amorn, although the
evidence of his work was as plain as an open box of dates or an unsealed
amphora. But the knave was well-nigh invisible.

Invisible? Toran snorted. That was mere fantasy, but the lout always seemed
to know when it was safe to strike — leaving only the evidence of his
thievery.

Not tonight. Toran had worked out a plan to capture the culprit. He made
his preparations during the day, then stationed himself in one of the
smaller side rooms of the dockside building.

But the plan had its own disadvantages. After hours of waiting in the
shadows, his bad leg had begun to throb. Soon he would have to shift his
positions, and that would give him away. He clenched his fists, his jaw set
in a hard line as he fought down the pain.

He was about to give up when the sound of soft, stealthy footsteps put him
on alert. Someone had come into the room where Toran had stacked crates of
the cargo that the thief had been plundering. He stayed where he was,
determined to win the upper hand this time. He could not see into the room
where the bait was stacked, but when his keen ears detected the squeak of a
nail being eased from a crate lid, he readied himself to pull on the cord in
his right hand.

To his surprise, he heard a sudden flailing as though his quarry had
somehow realized what was about to happen. But it was already too
late.

The rope released a net that fell from the ceiling over the boxes — and
over the brigand who stood beside them.

The man let out a high-pitched scream, then scrabbled as he tried
desperately to disentangle himself from the web, but the edges were
weighted, making it hard to lift.

Toran sprang from his hiding place and moved across the stone floor as
quickly as he could. But he had been standing in place for too long. His bad
leg gave out, and he ended up going down in a heap. Luckily, the netting
trap gave him the time to crawl forward and come down on top of the
struggling prisoner.

They lay entangled on the cold floor, both breathing hard, the miscreant
trying desperately to get away, and Toran just as determined to hold onto
his captive. As the man thrashed about, Toran felt spindly arms and legs, a
slender back, and a mass of soft hair. An unusual combination, he thought as
he pulled the webbing tight, gathering it around the prisoner as though he
were securing a wild animal in a net.

“Stop struggling or you will hurt yourself,” he advised.

The words were met with a stout kick to his bad leg that might have hurt if
the netting hadn’t truncated the blow.

It was too dark in the warehouse to see the struggling form. Ignoring his
throbbing knee, Toran gathered up net and captive and dragged them across
the floor and through the cargo door onto the riverside wharf where he had
left a lantern burning on a hook.

At this hour of the night, there was no one else about. As he dragged his
bundle, he added to his impressions of the thief. This was no full-grown
man. It must be a youth — mayhap a desperate street urchin who was using
the shipments as a source of food. Still, stealing was stealing, and it must
stop.

Angry that the exertion had him breathing hard, Toran grabbed the prisoner
by the hair and turned him to his back so that he was suddenly looking down
into frightened green eyes. They were the first thing he saw, but he quickly
took in more details. Wild dark hair framing a delicate face. A small nose,
a slender neck. His gaze traveled farther downward, seeing ragged clothing
of a cut he did not recognize. Not pants below the dirty shirt, but skirts.
As a former holy brother, he had little experience with skirts or anything
else to do with the female sex. Quickly his gaze traveled upward again,
seeing twin mounds pushing up at the chest. This was no slender lad. It was
a girl.

“Blood of the gods,” he croaked. “Who are
you?”

She looked away. “Nobody.” Her voice was soft and strangely
accented.

“A thief,” he answered his own question. “Look at
me.”

Slowly she turned her face back toward his, and he saw the look of
devastation in her eyes.

“Let me go and you will never see me again,” she
whispered.

“I cannot. You have stolen from a royal warehouse, and I must turn
you over to the prince’s guards.”

He saw her lips tremble. “I did it to keep myself alive.”

“Who are you?” he asked again.

 

About the Author

New York Times and USA Today Best-Selling Author Rebecca York began her
career as a journalist writing articles for newspapers and magazines, but
after several years decided to try writing fiction. She’s a highly
successful author of over 50 romantic suspense and paranormal novels and is
the head of the Columbia Writers Workshop. Her many awards include two Rita
finalist books. She has two Career Achievement awards from Romantic Times:
for Series Romantic Suspense and for Series Romantic Mystery. Her Peregrine
Connection series won a Lifetime Achievement Award for Romantic Suspense
Series. She collects rocks, and enjoys cooking, walking, reading, gardening,
travel, and Mozart operas.

 

Author Contact Links

Author’s Website

Author on Twitter

 

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok:
@changelingpress

 

Pre-Order Today

 

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Marissa Unbound Teaser Tuesday

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Unbound, Book 5

Paranormal Romance, Suspense, Dark Fantasy

Release Date: January 20, 2023

Publisher: Changeling Press, LLC

 

When Marissa learns her abusive husband, Arfon Hanson, plans to murder her
so he can take another wife, Marissa flees. She hopes to find sanctuary at
the convent where she was educated, but fate intervenes when Steffan Gwinett
rescues her from the henchmen Arfon sent to bring her back.

Years ago, Marissa and Steffan had been in love, but her father broke off
their relationship, sending her away. Their chance meeting rekindles all
their old feelings for each other. After they make love, Steffan vows to
expose Arfon for a would-be murderer.

Marissa won’t let Steffan take on the dangerous job alone. She
disguises herself as a boy, and they begin an investigation of Arfon. They
get more than they bargained for when they discover her husband is the
leader of a demon-worshiping cult — and is making plans to offer a local
boy as a sacrifice. Can they rescue the victim and find a happy ever after
for themselves?

Marissa Unbound tablet

EXCERPT

Copyright ©2023 Rebecca York

 

Steffan Gwinett rode past the darkened house and dismounted in the pasture
where Darias, his horse, could graze as he would. The moon was almost full,
and the sky danced with stars, the heavens giving him enough light to guide
his steps. He stood for a moment looking toward the spot where the bee boxes
had stood. He could see no sign of them now.

“I’ll be back soon,” he said to his steed, before turning
toward the cottage.

It was not an imposing dwelling. The main room had a packed dirt floor.
When he’d lived there, the only furnishings had been a large fireplace
for warmth and cooking and a table and chairs for sitting and eating. Up
above, on the opposite side from the fireplace, was a narrow loft where he
had slept. Beyond the main room lay another, barely large enough for a
mattress, where his parents had slept until his mother had died. Then it was
only Steffan and his grizzled old father — until his father, too, had
succumbed to years of hard labor.

Steffan’s father had been a farmer whose fortunes rose and fell with
the vagaries of the weather. When the crops were good they ate well, with
extra coin for buying necessities they could not make themselves. Sometimes
they could even afford a few luxuries, like sturdy fabric for his mother to
sew into clothing.

Steffan had known that hardscrabble life was not for him. He’d
dreamed of running off with the girl he loved, though that had only been a
foolish fancy.

After reality had crashed over him, he had gone off to join King
Norwen’s troops. That had not worked out either. Three years of
enforcing the king’s draconian edicts had been enough for him.
He’d declined his next enlistment and taken the coin he’d
managed to save during his time of service.

Now here he was, having another look at this land, wondering if he could
make it work for him in a way his father had never considered.

He was almost to the front door when he stopped short. Since childhood
he’d enjoyed a talent other people did not possess. He had no name for
it, yet somehow he always knew when he was not alone.

That sixth sense had saved his life more than once when he’d been a
member of the royal troops — like the time they’d been ordered to
clear a town of troublemakers. One of the ruffians had been waiting with a
heavy club at the intersection of two streets. Sensing him, Steffan had
stopped in his tracks and turned the tables on the would-be assailant.

That same ability slowed his steps now as he approached the cottage.
Stopping short of the entrance, he drew his knife and reached for the knob,
easing the door inward a few inches. At the same time, he stepped to the
side so that he would not be an immediate target. With the door cracked, he
stood in the cool night air — listening. He could hear nothing. The house
looked as though it was abandoned, yet his instincts told him that was not
true. Pushing the door open a bit farther, he peered into the darkness,
waiting for his eyes to adjust to the shadowy interior. When he could take
in details, he scanned the room. The table and chairs were gone, as was all
the cooking equipment near the fireplace.

He tipped his head up, directing his attention to the loft. Someone could
be up there in the shadows, waiting to leap down on anyone who entered. A
quick glance told him the access ladder was also missing. Unless an intruder
had pulled it up after himself, there was no way to reach the sleeping
platform.

Who would be in here? From the squalid looks of the interior, obviously not
someone who had made a home in this empty cottage. Perhaps it was a ruffian
using it as a temporary hideout.

With the main room cleared, his next target was the bedroom. Quietly he
crossed the packed dirt and listened at the ripped curtain that still hung
there.

Steffan detected nothing — until the curtain flew open and a dark figure
leaped out at him, the only thing clearly visible the glint of moonlight on
steel.

Only Steffan’s instincts and his hours in the practice yard saved him
from a serious knife wound. He twisted away from the assailant and thrust
out his foot, sending the knave sprawling and their blade skittering
away.

The man was hardly an experienced fighter, Steffan noted as he followed the
attacker down, trapping him against the packed earth floor.

The man? No, it must be a youth. In their frantic struggle he detected
little meat on the assailant’s arms, and little muscle mass. This boy
had no idea how to fight off a warrior — luckily for Steffan. “Stop
struggling before you get hurt,” he growled.

Probably realizing that further combat was dangerous, the assailant took
his advice — which gave Steffan time to evaluate the body that lay beneath
his. He had expected a shallow chest to go with the spindly arms. The
reality was quite different. Instead of a boy’s upper trunk, he felt
the swell of nicely rounded breasts. Confusion grabbed him as he stared down
into glaring green eyes. Familiar eyes — eyes that took him back to another
time and place.

He gasped, feeling as though he had taken a hard blow to the gut in a
jousting match. For heartbeats he was frozen in place — as was the girl who
glared up at him.

Finally he was able to choke out, “Marissa Dumfries.”

About the Author

New York Times and USA Today Best-Selling Author Rebecca York began her
career as a journalist writing articles for newspapers and magazines, but
after several years decided to try writing fiction. She’s a highly
successful author of over 50 romantic suspense and paranormal novels and is
the head of the Columbia Writers Workshop. Her many awards include two Rita
finalist books. She has two Career Achievement awards from Romantic Times:
for Series Romantic Suspense and for Series Romantic Mystery. Her Peregrine
Connection series won a Lifetime Achievement Award for Romantic Suspense
Series. She collects rocks, and enjoys cooking, walking, reading, gardening,
travel, and Mozart operas.

 

Contact Links

Rebecca York on Facebook

Rebecca York on Twitter

 

Publisher’s Instagram/Facebook/Twitter: @changelingpress

 

Pre-Order Now

 

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Harri Unbound Teaser Tuesday

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Dark Fantasy, Paranormal Romance, Suspense

Date Published:  May 27, 2022 

When the ruthless magician Madrin dies, opportunists seek revenge for his
cruelty. They kidnap his daughters, meaning to sell them into sexual slavery
at a brutal club for sadistic, wealthy men. Lady Harri Madrin manages to
escape before the doors close behind them and vows to rescue her sister,
Morgan.

Gareth Lamb, the handsome son of a local merchant, finds Harri and hides
her from her furious pursuers. When she begs him to help rescue her sister,
he agrees. They decide to pretend she is his concubine so they can gain
entry to the club to search for Morgan.

The master-slave charade forces them into sizzling erotic encounters. Soon,
they fall in love, but Gareth knows he could never aspire to marriage with
the high-born Lady Harri.

Though Harri’s magical abilities give them an edge, they’re
badly outnumbered by the slavers. Even if they manage to rescue Morgan, will
Gareth’s disapproving father disown him if they declare their love and
attempt to marry?

EXCERPT

All rights reserved.

Copyright ©2022 Rebecca York

 

Harri Madrin woke in her narrow bed in the dark hours of the night. For a
moment she thought she might be dreaming — until she realized there was
some sort of disturbance in the convent, something she had never heard in
this place of tranquility.

With moonlight streaming through the narrow window, she slipped across the
stone floor of the small chamber to where her sister still slumbered.
“Morgan, wake up. Something bad is happening.”

Her younger sister’s eyes blinked open as the sound of rough male
voices came closer. Men in the convent? Never, unless there was some task
that the vestals could not accomplish on their own. And never at
night.

Sister Matilda rushed into the room. “Hurry, you must hide! They are
after you.” She had always been kind to them, and now her wrinkled
face was full of fear.

“Who? Why?”

“For revenge. Your father is dead.”

Harri felt nothing for her sire besides a flood of relief. In all her
eighteen years, she had feared her father, the magician, Madrin. Now he
would no longer rail at her for being born the wrong sex — and for not
inheriting any of his powers. Or so he thought. He was incorrect about the
latter, but she had kept that knowledge from him, unwilling to give him the
satisfaction of her talent. It was the same for her sister, Morgan.

“You must hide before they find you.” Sister Matilda
urged.

“But where?”

“Come with me,” she pleaded.

“We must dress,” Morgan protested.

“No time.” The elderly vestal ushered them out of their room.
The stone floor was cold on their bare feet as they followed the sister to a
small chapel. She led them up the aisle to the front of the room, then
removed two candlesticks and opened the top of the altar where they saw a
deep cavity under the horizontal surface.

“In with you.”

The girls climbed into the box, curling on their sides and scrunching down
to fit into the space.

“I will come back for you when it’s safe,” Sister Matilda
promised before lowering the lid. The sound of metal hitting wood told Harri
she had replaced the candlesticks.

Harri moved in the cramped space, trying to get comfortable. She froze when
a rough male voice demanded, “What have you done with
them?”

“Nothing.”

“You’re lying, you old bitch.”

“You dare such sacrilege?”

“You are no better than Madrin, sheltering his demon’s
spawn.”

The words were followed by the sound of a hand slapping against flesh.
Sister Matilda cried out in pain.

“Where are they?”

There was no answer, but Harri heard something hitting the floor. She
crammed her fist against her mouth as she struggled not to scream.

Outside in the chapel, a whirlwind of destruction erupted — heavy pews
being tossed about, glass breaking. And then silence.

Harri trembled in their hiding place, and she could feel her sister’s
similar vibrations.

Footsteps approached the altar, and she struggled to keep her teeth from
chattering. A sweeping noise sent the candlesticks clattering to the stones.
The top creaked up, and Harri cringed away.

“And what have we here?”

About the Author

New York Times and USA Today Best-Selling Author Rebecca York began her
career as a journalist writing articles for newspapers and magazines, but
after several years decided to try writing fiction. She’s a highly
successful author of over 50 romantic suspense and paranormal novels and is
the head of the Columbia Writers Workshop. Her many awards include two Rita
finalist books. She has two Career Achievement awards from Romantic Times:
for Series Romantic Suspense and for Series Romantic Mystery. Her Peregrine
Connection series won a Lifetime Achievement Award for Romantic Suspense
Series. She collects rocks, and enjoys cooking, walking, reading, gardening,
travel, and Mozart operas.

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Follow the Publisher on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter: @changelingpress

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Gawain Unbound Teaser Tuesday

 

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Erotic Fantasy Romance

 

Date Published: 2/25/22

When Killian returned alive after an enchanted captivity, his younger brother Prince Gawain was more than happy to step aside as heir to the throne of Abercarn. Now, though, Gawain is at loose ends — until Lady Catrin seduces him and secures his agreement to stalk Madrin, the evil magician who enchanted Killian and killed her father.

Posing as troubadours, the two battle adversity together and find that they are connected by more than their hatred of Madrin. Yet despite their growing longing for a life together, neither of them is willing to abandon their dangerous quest. Their confrontation with their powerful and wily enemy will be the ultimate test of their resolve and their love.

Excerpt

She collapsed on top of him, her sweat-slick body sliding against his for a moment before she levered herself away and collapsed to the moss beside him, leaving him breathing hard as he regained his senses.

What did I just do? He might have sprung away from her then, but her hand shot out to grasp his wrist, holding him in place.

He glared down at her. “What just happened?

You had your way with me.”

I believe it was the other way around. Did you bewitch me?”

No.”

Then what in the names of all the gods happened?”

A smile played about her lips. “We fucked each other to a very satisfactory conclusion.”

His harsh laugh filled the glen. “Tell me, how did we go from conversation to fucking in the blink of an eye?”

It was what you wanted.”

He considered her answer. “I might have wanted you, but I never would have acted with such haste.”

I know.” She dragged in a breath and let it out. “My father, Simon Waller, was a mage.” Before Gawain could interrupt, she went on. “The skill passes from one generation to the next, sometimes strongly and sometimes with lesser effect. I have only a fraction of his powers, but I have one talent that serves me well. I can urge a man or a woman to do something that they are already contemplating. You wanted to fuck me, and I helped you go from thought to action.”

He couldn’t deny the desire he had felt and the unseemly way he had acted upon that desire. Realizing that they were having this conversation in the nude in a forest glen, he began gathering up the clothing he had discarded. When she saw what he was doing, she also reached for her drawers.

They both dressed quickly. When she finished adjusting her dress, she met his gaze. “And you would compel me to accompany you on your journey to find Madrin and punish him?”

She shook her head. “I would never compel a man to undertake a task that could lead to his death. A decision like that must be made without coercion.”

About the Author

New York Times and USA Today Best-Selling Author Rebecca York began her career as a journalist writing articles for newspapers and magazines, but after several years decided to try writing fiction. She’s a highly successful author of over 50 romantic suspense and paranormal novels and is the head of the Columbia Writers Workshop. Her many awards include two Rita finalist books. She has two Career Achievement awards from Romantic Times: for Series Romantic Suspense and for Series Romantic Mystery. Her Peregrine Connection series won a Lifetime Achievement Award for Romantic Suspense Series. She collects rocks, and enjoys cooking, walking, reading, gardening, travel, and Mozart operas.

Follow the Publisher on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter: @changelingpress

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