Wings of Fire, September 2011
Guardians of Ascension #3
by Caris Roane
St. Martin's Press
Featuring: Parisa Lovejoy; Antony Medichi
450 pages ISBN: 031253373X EAN: 9780312533731 Kindle: B004VMV3UE Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
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"A Wonderfully Steamy Read"
Reviewed by Kathyrn Little
Posted October 4, 2011
Romance Paranormal
Antony fights death vampires...not the easiest job in the
world, but fitting for a hero. Parisa is beautiful, brave,
and kind. She is also extremely powerful, making her
existence a dangerous one.
This book jumps immediately into action, Parisa is
kidnapped by a man who keeps mortal women for their blood.
Antony will stop at nothing to retrieve Parisa. While in
captivity, Parisa makes a friend-only to see her
tortured...eliciting an even greater drive to escape and
help her friend. The book takes off from here.
The love scenes in this book are explicit. They are also
extremely believable and make for a great read for romance
readers. The main characters are the focus, they blow all
of the secondary characters out of the water. The reader
will be focused on them for the most part. The love
between Parisa and Antony is plain to see. The ending is
extremely satisfying and the reader will close the book
feeling as if he/she made a wonderful reading choice.
SUMMARY
Warrior of the Blood and powerful vampire, Antony Medichi
battles to protect an untried mortal, Parisa Lovejoy. At
the same time, he resists his overwhelming attraction to
her, knowing he will fail her as he once failed others in
his life. But her fortitude as she faces an unknown world
at war, forces him to come to grips with his past and his
growing love for this innocent, unsuspecting librarian.
Parisa loved her safe, cloistered life on Mortal Earth but
the unexpected appearance of her wings sets her on a
journey that demands strength and courage, especially since
she finds herself in a strange world of ascending
dimensional earths. Because her extraordinary
preternatural powers have put her directly in the enemy’s
path, she must strive to conquer her fears and to accept
her new role on Second Earth. When her survival soon
depends on giving herself completely to Antony, she must
break apart her narrow view of life or perish.
ExcerptMy Beloved
In the twilight I think of him
He sees me in the wonder of his eye
I allow the air to breathe
He does not move with swift feet
His thoughts turn to me imagined
I wait beyond the faint boundary of time
He does not rush
My steps are measured
I have known his love from the beginning
I perceive his beauty angled, firm
He is earnest in his movements
Love rises on wings of fire
Maria Medichi, 707AD – 732AD
Translated by her husband, Antony,
1845
The search is futile
When carried out by the avenging heart.
— Collected Proverbs, Beatrice of Fourth
Chapter One
In the last three months, since the abduction of his
woman, Antony Medichi, out of Italy in the late Roman era,
had become a killing machine. He had steel for bones and
molten iron for blood. He rarely slept. He battled death
vampires at night sending to perdition any who crossed his
sword. But during the day, when most of the pretty-boys
were asleep, Antony bled his wrists on his altar and hunted
rogue vampires on Mortal Earth searching for the woman he’d
lost three months ago.
Those hunts also ended in death. Not his.
He stood on the rim of the Grand Canyon, Mortal Earth,
looking down, tracking a death vampire flying in the
shadows. Even though he was far from the touristy areas,
he still cloaked his presence with a heavy concentration of
mist, a preternatural creation designed to confuse the
average human mind. For most mortals, he simply couldn’t
be seen and right now he didn’t want to be seen.
Antony stared into the abyss. The profound silence
across the canyon formed a strange juxtaposition to the
visual feast. The Grand Canyon was all for the eyes, not
for the ears. But he hadn’t come to admire the view or to
embrace the quiet.
His predatory gaze followed the death vampire flying
below, legs straight back, glossy black wings glinting in
the early morning sunshine. He’d been hunting this
particular bastard for weeks now. All clues had led here.
This pretty-boy had known both Eldon Crace and Rith
Do’onwa, two sons of bitches who had harmed women belonging
to the Warriors of the Blood. Both vampires deserved
death. Crace had already gotten what he deserved and
within the depth of Medichi’s mind, Rith Do’onwa, the fiend
who had kidnapped his woman three months, was a death
waiting to happen, nothing more.
Three months ago, Medichi had served as Parisa Lovejoy’s
Guardian of Ascension. She’d entered his world as an
anomaly, a mortal with wings, a woman of extraordinary
preternatural power in need of protection from the enemy.
No one, except the first ascender, had mounted wings on
mortal earth. But Parisa had. She’d also arrived with the
ability to voyeur, a power that allowed her to focus on an
individual or a place and to see what was happening in real
time, to watch events unfold in an entirely separate
location, even a different dimension.
So much power, and beauty, and a strong analytical
mind.
But for all these immense gifts and abilities, they
paled in comparison to the call of the breh-hedden, the
myth of vampire mate-bonding, that had proved as real as
the air he breathed. She was his breh, his mate, the one
destiny had selected for him, the one he craved.
He hadn’t asked for a mate. He hadn’t wanted one and he
sure as hell didn’t deserve one, but she’d come, he’d
served as her guardian, and she’d been abducted on his
watch.
So here he was, a wrecked, shell of a warrior,
struggling to find his way back to her.
When Rith had abducted Parisa, Rith had not only blocked
his trace, which indicated an enormous amount of
preternatural power, but he’d deceived Medichi with a
hologram of Parisa that lasted for at least half a minute.
Medichi didn’t know anyone, not even any of his warrior
brothers, the powerful Warriors of the Blood, who could
create a hologram. So, yeah, Rith had power, which made
him a clever, dangerous opponent.
But the death vampire working the airstreams of the
Grand Canyon had known Rith. He had answers and Medichi
meant to have them. Right now. This morning.
His heart pumped hard in his chest.
The death vampire flew close to the canyon walls as
though trying to hide in the shadows. Medichi smiled the
hard smile that tended to work his jaw at the same time.
Did the death vamp actually think to hide in a place this
size?
Medichi bound his hair, not in the ritual cadroen
as he was supposed to but with a narrow leather strap over
his forehead, tied at the back of his head so that his long
warrior hair flowed free. He was uncivilized now, a wild
beast hunting for what was his by right, for what had been
taken from him.
He had his wings at close-mount, tight to his body
since any breeze would send him off the canyon’s edge
otherwise. But now it was time to take care of business.
With the practice of thirteen centuries, he spread his
wings to full-mount, adjusting with infinitesimal shifts to
balance the air currents, then launched into the empty air
space over the canyon.
A rush of pure adrenaline shot through his heart then
sent dizzying endorphins into his head. There was nothing
like flight, nothing like falling off a cliff and knowing
that spreading his wings to their farthest span would
catch, hold, then carry him where he wanted to go.
With a slight adjustment, the barest drawing back of his
wings, his body shifted at an angle that meant down, and
down he started to fly. Down and down, into the varying
degrees of cool shadow and warm light as the canyon walls
jutted and receded.
He was close now, his quarry an eighth of a mile away,
less, less, a hundred yards now.
The bastard looked up. Shit. Maybe Medichi’s shadow
had crossed him.
Panic seized the pretty-boy’s eye and he banked left
then drew his wings into close mount. He threw his arms
forward as though diving, his body now aimed in the
direction of the Colorado River.
Medichi didn’t hesitate. He folded his wings close to
his body and instead of flying in long pulls through the
air, he became a missile as well and headed with fierce
intent after his prey.
The bastard was good and he was old, which meant he had
power, speed, and lots of fucking skill.
But then so did Medichi. He had never mounted his
wings during battle, but he flew, a lot. He practiced, a
lot. And now he smiled, his jaw twitching.
The mile deep canyon walls sped past him, the
striated layers of rock blending into an orange-beige
fusion as he jetted toward the blue and white ribbon
below. Closer.
He could almost touch the bastard’s foot.
Closer.
If he could wrap a hand around his ankle.
Closer.
The waters rose up and up.
Shit.
The death vamp leveled off just three feet above
the water but Medichi took a huge risk, kept his missile
shape for a split-second longer and just as the death vamp
started to plow air, Medichi caught his ankle and jerked
him down, straight into the frothy rapids of the river
below. At the same time, with the steel of his bones, the
molten iron of his blood, and a swift mental command, he
snagged his levitation ability and threw his wings into
parachute mount, cupped at the top, to keep from plunging
into the frigid water.
The death vamp wasn’t so lucky. His wings went
under and he surfaced screaming because the water had
trashed his wings. The mesh superstructure that held the
feathers in place was fairly fragile and the smallest
injury hurt like a bitch. This tumbling in wild waters
would be a form of torture. As the current dragged him in
a heap, tossing him over and over, the death vamp screamed
each time his head breached the water. He landed back
first against an enormous rock. Medichi heard the crack as
well as another shriek.
Medichi flew after him and when the pretty-boy
would have slid into the heavy currents that swirled at the
base of the rock, Medichi grabbed him by his long, dark
hair and hauled him out of the water. He threw him face
down on the rock. How many mortals had this motherfucker
drunk to death? How many ascenders? Death vamps didn’t
differentiate when it came to dying blood. Any human,
ascended or not, would do.
Medichi wafted his wings slowly to keep his balance
against the air currents that streamed through the canyon.
God, the bastard’s wings were a mess. The vamp
shook hard, maybe from the icy water but probably from
shock and a mountain of pain.
\"Where’s Rith?\" he asked. Time to keep the
questions simple.
The death vampire shifted slightly to cast one dark
beautiful eye up at Medichi. Calling death
vampires ‘pretty-boys’ was more than accurate. He was
exquisite, chiseled features shaped by the effects of dying
blood, porcelain skin with a faint bluish cast, enhanced no
doubt by the freezing water. Medichi felt the pull of
attraction, an allure that created a swelling of ease
within his chest. Fuck. Even shaking with pain and
approaching death, the bastard was trying to enthrall him.
Medichi punched back with a shot of mental power that
acted like a blow, pushing the death vamp’s face into the
rock.
\"Even at this hour,\" Medichi shouted, \"when you
face death, you’d try to enthrall me?\"
A smile curved the side of the pretty-boy’s mouth.
Blood dribbled from his lips onto the wet black rock
beneath his face. \"Fuck you,\" he whispered.
\"Where’s Rith?\"
The death vampire just smiled. Yeah, questions would be
futile but he always gave them a chance because what he
intended to do next would hurt like hell.
He retracted his wings then dropped to his knees
beside the death vamp. A bone jutted from the bastard’s
thigh, shiny and white. Blood ran in a rivulet down his
ruptured skin, but the water, still shedding from the
nearest feathers of his broken wings, kept washing it away.
\"You sure you don’t want to just tell me?\" Medichi
asked. One last chance.
The same reply returned, this time in a much
stronger, \"Fuck you.\"
\"Fine,\" Medichi said. \"We’ll do it the hard way.\"
He put his hand on the vamp’s forehead.
The struggle began as the pretty-boy’s mind bucked
against Medichi’s touch as though trying to cast him out of
his head. He put up a good fight, too, but more than just
Medichi’s body had grown tougher over the past three months
of forced separation from Parisa. He’d been working his
mental powers as well, trying to find his woman
telepathically. In doing so he’d gotten stronger.
He shoved hard and the vampire’s mind gave way. The
death vamp screamed but Medichi ignored his cries and began
the real hunt.
He cast aside memories like batting at flies until
Rith’s strange face emerged, the Asian cast to his
features, the broad forehead and wide nose. He focused on
those memories and gained a portrait of the man as a
powerful servant of Commander Greaves but then what else
would he be? Greaves was the acknowledged enemy of all
that Medichi held dear on Second Earth, in this beautiful
dimensional world. Darian Greaves had ambitions to rule
both Second Earth and Mortal Earth and was creating a
powerful army of death vamps to back up his efforts. Rith
was a favored servant.
Within the death vampire’s mind, he saw Rith’s
lairs, sometimes in great caverns, sometimes in tents,
sometimes in suburban homes, but all in various
geographical locales. He kept picking through them, trying
to feel the presence of his woman. All the while the death
vamp screamed at the invasion.
Medichi came across the memory of one of Rith’s
properties that was shrouded in a mental shield. What the
fuck was that? This death vampire didn’t have enough power
to create a deep mental shield like this, which meant that
Rith had done it himself.
He tried punching through the shroud but couldn’t and
then the preternatural sensation stole over him, of simply
knowing. He knew. He could feel that this was where Rith
held Parisa captive, cloaked even from Central’s advanced
high-tech grid system that could locate anything on two
earths.
Parisa.
Parisa.
Sweet Jesus. He felt light-headed. He struggled to
breathe.
At last. He’d found a connection to her at last. He
focused on breathing for a moment. He had to get command
of himself if he had any hope of extracting the information
he needed.
When he was calmer and while he was still inside the
pretty-boy’s mind, he moved around the shrouded entity as
though walking a mental circle. The death vampire sobbed
now but Medichi didn’t give a rat’s ass. He’d witnessed
too many of the bastard’s memories, those that involved
securing dying blood, and the women he’d victimized to get
to it, always women because they were easily subdued
physically, all the women he’d killed.
So, yeah, let the bastard feel some pain. Let him feel
a lot of pain because it wouldn’t be even a fraction of the
devastation he’d created in the women he’d killed and the
families left behind to deal with all those losses.
He focused once more on the shrouded dwelling and
from deep, deep within the death vampire’s mind a location
at last came forth, Burma, Second Earth.
Medichi couldn’t quite grasp the sensation that
plowed through him but it popped a firework in his mind
until glitter rained in his head. Relief flowed, pure
exhilarating relief that after three long horrible months
of hunting, he had just limited his search to a single
country, located on only one of two dimensional earths.
Finally.
His entire body sagged and his throat tightened. He had
a chance now of finding her, of finding his woman.
Parisa on Second Earth and in Burma.
Even so, it would still take a few days given Rith’s
level of preternatural power, to find the lair that held
her captive. With Rith’s ability to create shields, no
doubt the dwelling in which Parisa was kept was under some
crazy-ass mist. The grid would have to search for an
anomaly; something non-specific and unidentifiable, in
other words something vague that didn’t belong.
But what were a few days after searching for three long
months and finding nothing? Yeah, he could wait a few days
for the grid to uncover an anomaly.
He closed his eyes. He took a long, long moment to
offer thanks to the Creator, lifting his face to the
heavens, his heart almost floating in a chest that had been
constricted from the moment, three months ago, when the
hologram of Parisa had disintegrated in front of his eyes.
He felt the pretty-boy’s life fading. He drew from
his mind and the death vamp vomited blood, a lot of it.
Medichi sat down beside the creature that had once
been a proper vampire youth. He put his hand on his
shoulder, and kept it there. His touch calmed the
shaking.
Medichi lowered his head to his knees. He despised what
the death vamp had done, but he’d also seen that as a young
ascender, a Twoling born on Second Earth, he’d tried dying
blood on a dare, offered not from a body but from a goblet
at a party. He’d been promised no ill-effects, just
pleasure. Well, pleasure he’d gotten but he’d also gotten
about three centuries of addiction, killing, despair and no
way back from a stupid teenage mistake. He hated all this
shit, the treachery of Greaves and his forces, the
resulting mortal victims, but he remained close to the
vampire, as much a victim as those he’d killed, until he
felt the final breath.
Stillness overcame the broken body. Medichi looked
up. How far away the rim of the canyon seemed. The rush
of water was loud in his ears and dominated his impression
of the space. Above, complete silence. Below, all this
rushing noise.
With his hand still on the death vampire, he spoke words
that had been his ritual for centuries. He was a man of
faith if not a believer in structured religion, so in
certain situations, like this one, he did what he thought
was right, even necessary.
He looked at the now empty shell beside him and spoke
against the hurtling water, \"May the Great Spirit help you
atone for these your terrible sins. May you be forgiven
and may you find peace in the arms of the Creator. Amen.\"
He released a heavy sigh.
So much death in their ascended dimension when it wasn’t
necessary. Vampires were essentially immortal, or had the
potential for immortality, to live forever. But the
terrible nature of dying blood, which seduced every death
vampire who partook of the addictive substance, made it
necessary to kill mortals and ascenders alike in order to
reach the infamous dying blood.
In turn, Commander Greaves, bent on the domination of
two worlds, used dying blood as one of his weapons. He not
only encouraged the creation of death vampires, but he
built armies made up of them. There were even rumors he
provided the blood not just to his armies but to those High
Administrators around the globe that he’d persuaded to join
his faction.
Medichi had no qualms about being the sword of justice.
He left forgiveness to God.
Still sitting, he pulled his phone from the pocket of
his black leather battle kilt and drew it to his ear. He
thumbed it. The phone was the size of a credit card and
was a direct line to Central. For all other calls, he had
a Blackberry.
\"Hey, Warrior Medichi,\" Carla said. \"Did you get him?\"
\"I got him.\"
He heard a whoop and a shout and then Medichi smiled.
Thank God for the women at Central. They were chosen for
their calm tempers and positive outlooks even in the face
of nightly death. They also did clean-up through a
sophisticated inter-dimensional process that was more
technology than preternatural power.
\"Has Jeannie gone home for the day?\" Carla and Jeannie
overlapped their schedules. Carla had the day shift, while
her best friend, Jeannie had the night shift. The women
were gold and served seven days-and-nights-a-week just like
the Warriors of the Blood.
\"Yeah,\" Carla said. \"I kicked her out an hour ago. She
has a brunch this morning with a Militia Warrior.\"
He bristled. As a Warrior of the Blood, his protective
instincts were always in overdrive, even where Jeannie and
Carla were concerned. The Militia Warriors, though less
powerful than the elite Warriors of the Blood, were still
strong hombres and carried a shitload of testosterone in
their own right. \"Is he treating her good?\" he growled.
\"He’d better if he wants to stay alive,\" Carla
responded, but she was chuckling. \"Hey, don’t worry. Not
only can Jeannie handle herself after this many centuries
as a vampire, but our Militia boys aren’t stupid. They
know the Warriors of the Blood would be all over their
asses if either of us got hurt.\"
\"Damn straight,\" he cried, but more softly, he
added, \"You still dating your man?\"
She giggled then sighed.
\"I take that as a yes.\"
\"He’s gorgeous,\" she cooed. \"Almost as pretty as you.\"
Medichi found himself smiling all over again even though
he was exhausted and had a torn-up and really dead pretty-
boy beside him. Yeah, this was his life, finding small
measures of comfort while sitting next to a corpse.
\"I need a little clean-up action,\" he said.
\"I see him. What a mess. Oh, God, look at those
wings.\" In recent months, satellite imaging had enhanced
the grid’s capacity as well. Medichi wondered if Carla
could see the scars laced down his back although right now
his long warrior hair hung almost to his waist. Well, if
she’d seen his scars anytime in the last three months she
hadn’t said anything, one more reason to love her. \"Close
your peepers.\"
Medichi let his eyelids fall. Damn he was tired
because it felt good to shut down like this, on a wet rock
in the middle of the Colorado River. \"Ready,\" he murmured
into his phone.
He saw the flash of light behind his lids. He felt
the air move beside him. He opened his eyes. The death
vamp was gone as well as any traces of blood, bone, or
other feathered debris. \"Clean as a whistle as usual,
Carla. Thanks.\"
\"I know you’ve been after this death vamp for
weeks. Please tell me you have some news for me? Anything
I can use to find our girl?\"
Our girl. That’s why he loved the Central staff.
They made everything feel like a team effort, that no
matter what you went through, you had back-up.
That earlier feeling of relief flowed through him again,
like a cool breeze on a hot day. \"Actually, I have the
best news.\" He explained getting inside the pretty-boy’s
head and finding the shrouded dwelling.
Carla squealed several times in the telling. He could
hear her tapping on her keyboard. \"I’m reconfiguring the
grid to Burma, Second Earth even as we speak. If I find so
much as a fly speck out of place I’ll call you. Just
remember that this will probably take two or three days.
Jesus, this country is so frigging big. Did you know it’s
the size of Texas?\"
\"Do what you can do,\" he said.
\"If we were looking for a power signature it would be
different, but we’ve already searched both worlds and
didn’t find one, so expect some near-misses.\"
\"Hey. Trust me. I know the drill.\"
\"I know you do but oh, how I want this to go fast and it
just can’t but holy shit—\" and Carla rarely used
profanity, \"Burma, Second Earth. This is fantastic news.
Have a limoncello on me. Now head home, Warrior, and for
the Creator’s sake, get some sleep. You’ve earned it.\"
Aw, hell. Carla was such a sweetheart. \"Can’t. Not
yet. I’m heading over to the Cave. Some of the brothers
might still be there having their morning bullshit session
and I’ll want to talk to Thorne. I’ll let him know about
the shift in grid coordinates.\" Thorne was in charge of
the Warriors of the Blood including all communications with
Central. But once the warriors had checked in from a night
of battling, searching for Parisa took priority.
Medichi wasn’t alone in his despair. All the warriors
had been wrecked by the disappearance of one who had been
lost on their watch. If it could happen to Medichi, it
could happen to any of them.
Carla’s voice dropped to a whisper. \"And you’ll let us
know about…well, you know.\"
\"Of course.\"
\"Good. Now give me a second to reconfigure the grid.\"
The tapping started.
He sighed and his heart pulled into a hard knot.
Every twenty-four hours he had contact with Parisa and
everyone knew it. What they didn’t know was the personal
way in which it happened and like hell he’d ever reveal
that truth because it was like having phone sex, but
without the phone. Once a day, and always in the morning
after he’d battled all night, he’d go home, shower up, sit
on the side of his bed and that’s when he’d hear Parisa’s
voice in his head, only once, ‘Antony’; a sweet telepathic
whisper that fired his heart and kept hope alive.
That was the only form of communication he had with
her. She wasn’t even ascended, so not all of her powers
were developed. And for whatever reason, even though she
was a mortal with wings, she couldn’t communicate with her
mind, at least not yet.
Despite this critical lack, she had another
preternatural power that was considered a Third Earth or
third dimension ability—she could open a voyeur’s window
and see events unfold in real time. If she was indeed in
Burma then this meant she was halfway around the globe when
she sent her single telepathic communication of, Antony.
It would be night to his day.
Sweet Jesus if that were true, then she had enormous
telepathic capacity, she just hadn’t learned how to use it
yet.
Whatever.
It still meant that in a half hour or so, he would go
home, get ready for bed, and discover whether his woman was
still alive.
His heart tightened a little more. He both dreaded and
longed for the experience because honest-to-God he didn’t
know what he would do if he didn’t hear her say his name
today within the depths of his mind. If he thought for
even a minute that she might be dead, he’d go mad.
Carla’s voice came back on the line. \"The grid’s
on Burma, Warrior, and you’re in my prayers.\"
His eyes burned. \"Thanks,\" he said, but his voice
sounded hoarse. \"Later.\"
\"Later.\"
He thumbed his phone and with a thought, folded to
his villa to change out of his kilt and weapons harness.
He still hadn’t revealed his scars to his brothers. Only
Marcus knew that his back was covered in a basket-weave of
silver scar tissue, and he’d promised his silence. There
was no way he was going to the Cave to meet with the
brothers while wearing only a kilt and a weapons harness.
The latter, though broad enough in the front to support two
daggers, had only a heavy narrow strip of black leather
running down his spine.
Shit. He knew the time had come to reveal this
hard truth about his mortal life, what had happened to him
and to his family thirteen centuries ago, just before his
ascension. But he dreaded speaking about the why of his
scars, of letting anyone get that close to him.
Well, he wasn’t ready to talk just yet.
He changed into his usual; a black tee, black cargos and
steel-toed boots. He thought the thought and headed to the
Cave.
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