"When the world is on the line, the price of a soul seems worth paying"
Reviewed by Diana Troldahl
Posted September 6, 2010
Fantasy Urban
Fatal Circle is the third book in the Persephone Alcmedi
series. Persephone has made it through the
high priestess competition, Eximium, to become the newest
member of the Eldrenn Xerxadrea's lucusi. She has killed an
evil fairy (in the middle of a rock concert) and is
adjusting to her new role as the fabled Lustrata, the person
who can save or destroy the world. FATAL CIRCLE picks up right where Hallowed Circle
left off, with main squeeze werewolf Johnny and vampire
Menessos competing for Persephone's attention. Persephone
has no
time to enjoy her new position before new challenges and
dangers arise, putting Nana, her grandmother, and Beverly,
her adopted daughter, at risk. The fairies are threatening
war, and the witches are willing to give them Persephone to
prevent it. For her own safety, and that of those she loves,
Persephone makes the difficult decision to make herself into
something reviled by her family and fellow witches in order
to buy time to find a way to avoid the battle, or win it
when it arrives. Persephone's relationship to Menessos has changed. She has
gone from being under his influence to being his master.
Johnny's past is drawing him to a role he was born for but
has always rejected. Persephone finds herself seeking help
based on vague and fragile clues that, best case, may cost
her part of her soul or, worst case, lead to the destruction
of all she holds dear and the world at large. Linda Robertson has created a sturdy framework for her
paranormal tales. Her world of vampires, witches, and
werewolves seamlessly entwines with modern and mundane
Cleveland, Ohio. FATAL CIRCLE answers some of the questions
hinted at in the earlier books, and poses a few more. The
characters, minor and major, drew me in despite reading
this as a stand-alone novel. They hooked me to the point of
tears and relief as they were faced with seemingly
insurmountable odds. Robertson has a gift for world-
building and characterization that will make her work last.
I am looking forward to the surprises in her next book with
great anticipation.
SUMMARY
Destiny sucks. . . . There was a time when Persephone Alcmedi thought her life
was hard to manage, what with wondering how to make sure she
took adequate care of both her grandmother and her foster
daughter, Beverley, whether she’d end up in the unwanted
position of high priestess of a coven, and whether her
wærewolf lover, Johnny, would resist the groupies who hang
around his band Lycanthropia. But that was before the fairies started demanding that
Seph’s frightening, unpredictable ally—the ancient vampire
Menessos— be destroyed . . . or the world will suffer. Seph
and Menessos are magically bonded, but that’s a secret she
dares not reveal to her fellow witches lest they be forced
to reject her and forbid her use of magic. And, despite the
strain this casts on her relationship with Johnny, as a
showdown with the fairies nears, she and Menessos badly need
the wærewolves as allies. Life, death, and love are all on the line, but when destiny
is calling, it doesn’t help to turn away. With the
individual threads of their fates twisted inextricably
together, can Seph, Johnny, and Menessos keep the world safe
from fairy vengeance?
ExcerptCHAPTER ONE--------My living room clock read two-forty-six a.m. It was no
longer Hallowe’en night, but All Hallows Day. Or, as some
called it, All Saints’ Day. But it was no saint who held me
in his arms—it was a wærewolf. “I think you’d like my apartment, Red.” Red. That’s me.
Persephone Alcmedi to the rest of the world. Seph to some.
Red only to Johnny, my not-exactly-Big-Bad-wærewolf. “It has
that open-living concept.” I wasn’t fooled. “It’s a glorified dorm room, isn’t it?” “If, by ‘glorified,’ you mean it has a private bathroom,
then yes.” Johnny sniffed, affecting annoyance. “Something I
sacrificed when I moved in here.” I’d had to forfeit my home’s vampire defenses three weeks
ago to save a friend’s life, Johnny had temporarily moved
into the third-floor attic room—for protection purposes
only. In the three weeks since, those defenses had since
been reinstated, but he’d remained. Being the epitome of
“tall, dark, and handsome,” I hadn’t complained. “C’mon.” Johnny’s deep blue eyes glittered seductively. His
voice dropped low. “Nothing’s more romantic than a bachelor
pad.” We’d both had a hell of an evening. Words like “hectic” or
“demanding” didn’t begin to cover it. I must have been the
only one suffering from fatigue. His band, Lycanthropia, had played at the Hallowe’en Ball.
Johnny was the vocalist and guitarist for the
techno-goth-metal band, and he’d given his all on stage. He
should have been as exhausted as I was. Of course, I’d made quite an effort on that stage, too. I’d
fought and killed a fairy in front of hundreds of witnesses
who’d applauded afterward, thinking it simply part of the
Hallowe’en show. Killer fairies and rock-n-roll: that was only a small part
of what we’d dealt with this evening. “Do you honestly want to show me your apartment now?” “My one bulb is burned out so there’s not much you’d
actually see.” His lean-muscled arms slid around me. I felt
so grounded and safe in his embrace. “But I promise, what
you feel will make up for it.” What Johnny wanted was crystal clear, and so was the reason
why he thought going elsewhere was a good idea. I’d already
mentioned my fears about the rest of the household learning
we were intimate, so he was trying to keep the secret. At
his apartment we could have assured privacy and we wouldn’t
have to retire to separate bedrooms like we did here.
Cuddling and sleeping together after sex would have been nice. Apparently, to him, if we weren’t actually seen together we
had plausible deniability. Not that my live-in grandmother,
I call her Nana, would ever believe that we’d visited his
apartment in the middle of the night just so he could give
me the nickel tour. Nana and my nine-year-old foster daughter, Beverley, were
asleep in their bedrooms—each just a hall’s width from mine.
The old saltbox farmhouse had paper thin walls. Even the
layers between second-floor ceiling and attic floor lacked
the ability to dampen noise. I’d heard Johnny playing his
guitar up there when the little amplifier wasn’t cranked up
to “1.” Still, there were things he didn’t know. Like, “The lucusi
is coming here at dawn, Johnny.” He pulled me closer. He’d gotten a shower after the show,
washing off the smell of leather stage-clothes and leaving
only the cedar and sage that was his unique scent. “Had to try.” His breath on my neck was warm, his voice just rough enough
to catch in my ear and tingle down to my toes. Parts of me
were suddenly insisting they didn’t qualify as weary. It
made me reconsider the definition of tired. “It’s just so
far to drive. All the way back to town, only to turn around
and come back here by dawn.” But people in the throes of new love did crazy things like that. Did I just think the ‘L’ word? I stiffened just as he suggested, “You could fly.” He was right, I could. Due to my performance a few days
earlier in the Eximium, a high priestess competition, I’d
been inducted into the powerful lucusi led by the Eldrenne
Xerxadrea that was due at dawn. A real witches broom was one
of the perks. “But…” “You don’t want to fly?” He nuzzled my neck. “It isn’t that.” Running my fingers through his long , dark
hair, I looked up—way up, he’s six-foot-two—and let him see
I wanted him, too. “I have a better idea.” “Do share.” Another nuzzle. “There’s only one place in my house with any kind of
soundproof privacy.” Tiptoeing, I kissed him lightly before
answering. “Your kennel.” “Oh, that is sooo hot.” He rubbed up and down my backside
and couldn’t suppress his grin. Carrying a lit jar candle and blankets, I led him outside
and around the house. Johnny pulled the slanted metal doors
open and I descended the concrete stairs. While Johnny shut the cellar doors, I placed the candle in
the middle of the floor and spread the blankets over the
freshly straw on the floor of the cage. I glanced into the
shadows at the door of the rearmost steel kennel. This was
where his beast was unleashed, where the animal in him took
over. A shiver of desire ran through me. When I heard Johnny’s footsteps had reached the bottom
stair, I asked over my shoulder, “I don’t suppose you could
help me out of this costume?” He stopped in his tracks. I tugged on the lacings of the bell-sleeved velvet mid-driff
bustier—part of my costume for the Ball—and smiled. “Actually—” His voice was a little higher than he intended.
He stopped to clear his throat and started over. “Actually,
I can help with that.” He was by me in an instant, deftly
working the knot. Seconds later, the fabric loosened and I
took a satisfyingly deep breath. Then those skillful fingers
touched the bare skin at my waist, thumbs drawing little
circles. “Anything else I can help you out of?” “I’m not technically out of this.” “Oh,” he said softly. “My bad.” He began loosening the
lace-up strings even more. “Up or down?” Though I knew he meant should he lift the shirt over my head
or push it down over my hips, I went with the word that had
more impact. “Definitely up.” He was so gentle, moving so slowly, careful of my hair and
the mask. He was just removing my shirt, but he made it
sensual, as if he were rubbing lotion all over me. Tanning
lotion. The cellar was suddenly so warm I could have been
standing in summer sunlight. The bustier fell into the
blanket-covered straw at my feet. As I kept my arms raised, Johnny placed my hands on the bars
atop the open cage door, and squeezed my grip to indicate I
should let them remain there. His warm fingers traced every contour of my arms, slowly
descending until he could brush my hair away from my ear on
one side. He put the line of his body against the back of me
and nuzzled against my ear. While he sucked gently on my
earlobe, his hands shifted toward my breasts. A trembling resonance fluttered up my spine. Heat was
building low in my abdomen, and under my sternum. Sensations
jolted through me like electricity, and all thought of
tiredness fled. Abruptly, the cellar door creaked open and crashed loudly
against the ground outside. “I locked that,” Johnny muttered. Someone was coming down the steps. We turned as one to see who— Menessos.
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