The Deepest Ocean (Eden Series) (42 page)

Because Zuri and her prisoner barged in before his fail-safes were in place, Henri had no choice but to lock them all down until he’s sure there’s no risk of spreading plague. He’d planned to study the harbinger, but it’s the mercenary holding the leash who intrigues him the most.

When Henri’s experiment goes awry, they learn they’ve all been pawns in a plan with one goal: bring the Araneae Nation to its knees. Zuri is forced to make a choice that could sign her death warrant—or sacrifice everyone she loves.

Warning: This book contains a chair-bound heroine who won’t let anyone—least of all a man—push her around. Expect tea-drinking, net-tossing, and knife-wielding. Should you feel compelled to indulge in a bear ride, please keep your hands on the reins and your feet in the stirrups. Author not responsible for possible maulings.

 

Enjoy the following excerpt for
A Breath of Winter:

Six hours, he said. Well, I slept twelve. “You should have waked me instead of letting me sleep the day away.” By the time I joined Henri in the laboratory, all my tasks had been done for me.

Henri had tended to the third and fourth crates, plucked the next batch of petals, crushed them in oil and resumed his usual position at his regular table, hunched over three tiny glass vials and a syringe, leaving Asher to admit me. Henri was so lost in his work, he didn’t acknowledge my arrival.

Turning to the male paying attention, I asked Asher, “Why are you here?”

His gaze skittered toward the open hatch, as if he meant to step through it, so I blocked him.

“Kaleb and Tau decided to stay with Ghedi to lessen the chance of passing the plague on to you. Fynn joined Malik a few hours ago.” At my growl, he added, “Fynn wants to help out, and he’s well enough. Braden and I are swapping shifts between the stables and bastille until we’re sure those two can handle it.” He smirked. “Wouldn’t want your brothers trying to pet the pretty lady, would we?”

“Asher?” I curled my finger until he bent down. “Don’t talk about my brothers.” I threw all the force I could muster into punching him in the gut. He gasped, but he was already bent over, so it was hard to judge whether I had made my point.

I was about to expound when Henri decided that I did, in fact, exist. He straightened slowly with a rusty movement that made him wince.

“Asher’s on his way out.” Henri left neither of us any doubt he had meant it as an order.

I rolled aside and let Asher leave with a twinge of regret for my actions.

I should have led with my other fist.

“What are you up to this fine afternoon?” I pointed to his desk. “Is that the preventative?”

He chuckled as he stood. “You can’t help yourself, can you?”

I watched him pocket the syringe. “Curiosity is a professional failing of mine.”

“I’ve noticed.” He walked a slow circle around me. “Yet it’s a trait I admire in you.”

I forced myself to hold still. “What are you doing?”

A scuffling sound made me think he had knelt. “Checking the chair for signs of wear.”

“Ah.” My nape prickled under his regard. “Is its condition satisfactory?”

“It appears to be holding up well,” he said from much too near my ear. “I just need to…” He jostled me while making some adjustment or other. Metal groaned and I jumped at the rapid succession of clicks that raised my seat. After many tense minutes passed, the chair stopped rocking.

I waited a heartbeat before asking, “Are you finished?”

He leaned over my shoulder, and his breath fanned my throat. “It depends.”

My pulse spiked when he toyed with the hairs at my nape. “On?” I turned my head a fraction and caught him as he stared down the front of my gown. Wicked female that I was, I arched my back in what was dangerously close to invitation. “I can see you.”

“I know,” he said softly. “I think…you might be the only one who does. See me.”

I nuzzled his cheek. “You mean you’re usually stealthier when staring down females’ shirts?”

He must have smiled. I felt the scraping of his teeth against my skin, and my sight went blurry.

“Henri.”

We jumped apart at the sound of Asher’s voice. He was braced in the doorway, panting. We had been too lost in conversation to hear the hatch open, but I felt the draft from the hall seeping in now.

“Why aren’t you in bed?” Henri sounded less flustered than I would just now. Yet when he braced on my good shoulder, his thumb caressing my pulse, his hand trembled.

“Braden said I ought to take a spare room to stay close, but I headed to my room in the stables.” Asher’s shirt was slicked to his body, and his chest pumped while he gasped for air.

“What happened?” I peered behind him, into the hall.

“The animals,” he panted. “I blamed the storm. They always get wild when the weather turns.”

Henri poured Asher a glass of water and put a hand on his shoulder. “Slow down.”

“On the way to my room, I heard this thumping sound and went to investigate. It was Noir. She was throwing a hissy, ramming her stall door with her shoulder like she was trying to bust it down. Paladin Rhys warned us, said his brother favored the mad sow. I tried calming her, nothing worked.”

“Noir is temperamental.” Henri told me, “So is Farrow for that matter. It’s in the bloodline.”

Asher nodded. “I stuffed those herbs you left us for sedating trouble boars into a slab of varanus steak and tossed it to Noir. On my way to bed, I heard the noise again, this time near the exit hatch.”

“The one we used to enter the stables?” I asked.

“There’s only one exit hatch,” he snapped.

Henri cleared his throat.

Asher scowled at me. “I mean, yes. The noise came from the same hatch I led you through.” His breathing slowed. “I figured it must be one of the guards wanting to pass a message through. After I saw what that thing did to Ghedi, I wasn’t about to open so much as the post slot to receive a letter. I climbed the ladder and used the lookout to see what I was dealing with. A male was banging his fists on the hatch. At first, he seemed all right—frantic—but if more of those things might be out there…”

Henri became very still. “Did you open the hatch?”

“No. I didn’t get the chance.” Asher’s knuckles whitened. “Another male joined the first. When I didn’t let them in, they began snarling at one another. They attacked each other. That first one—he tore out the other’s throat and fell on him in the snow.” Asher blinked his wide eyes. “I’ve seen a lot in my time, all Mimetidae have, but nothing as brutal as those two. What are they? Why are they here?”

“They’re risers—corpses,” Henri said. “As to why they’re here…”

Our eyes met in the same moment, but I was the one to say, “They’ve come for her.”

The Deepest Ocean

 

 

 

Marian Perera

 

 

 

 

Love as strong as the tide. Betrayal as cruel as an undertow.

 

Eden Series, Book 2

Moments before he sets sail into pirate waters to rescue prisoners, Captain Darok Juell receives additional orders—to take a mysterious woman on board who will help him in his mission.

When she arrives, she is unlike any woman he has ever seen. A cold, controlled operative of Seawatch, Yerena Fin Caller wields an iron hand over her emotions, and an almost magical control over a great white shark.

On the surface, her orders are simple: use her shark to guide Darok through dangerous waters, attack any pirates who interfere. Her emotions must remain under lock and key, lest they travel along her delicate connection with the finned killing machine below.

As she and Darok navigate the Strait of Mists into the Iron Ocean—and evade a killer-whale-controlling traitor—Darok’s generosity and warmth coax Yerena to give in to desire. But they have no future together. Especially if Darok’s legendary recklessness forces her to obey a secret order to send his ship to the bottom of the sea…

 

Warning: Contains naval battles, a shark that enjoys winning races, a woman who can control the shark—sometimes, the captain who wants her in his bunk, and hot sex on the high seas.
 

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This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locale or organizations is entirely coincidental.

 

Samhain Publishing, Ltd.

11821 Mason Montgomery Road Suite 4B

Cincinnati OH 45249

 

The Deepest Ocean

Copyright © 2014 by Marian Perera

ISBN: 978-1-61921-928-1

Edited by Anne Scott

Cover by Kanaxa

 

All Rights Are Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

 

First
Samhain Publishing, Ltd.
electronic publication: April 2014

www.samhainpublishing.com

Table of Contents

Dedication

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

About the Author

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Also Available from Samhain Publishing, Ltd.

Back Cover Copy

Copyright Page

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