Title: Fire & Ice
Author: Michele
Barrow-Belisle
Genre: Young Adult Fantasy
Romance
Blurb:
When 16 year old Lorelei was a child, a dark faerie gifted her with the ability to see and heal pain, and sing with the voice of a seraph. She's spent her life trying to shake off these uncontrollable gifts, because let’s face it, events like healing cuts with a touch make reality TV look... well... real. When her mother falls critically ill and Lorelei's powers aren't enough, she turns to Adrius, a new guy at school. He's dark, tortured. And mesmerizing. And he claims to know of a rare medicinal herb that will save her mother’s life.
Desperate, she follows him into a mysterious realm, where Elves are even hotter than Legolas, and Faeries....are nothing like Tinkerbell. Lose the butterfly wings, and add a tattoo... think butt-kicking, blade-wielding, lean, mean and perversely dangerous. Adrius is an Elven prince, and Lorelei's dark Faerie of Music is flesh-and-blood real. The two magical beings are fire and ice opposites. One Lorelei can’t help falling for, and the other she's compelled to be with, after learning magic she doesn’t yet possess could help end a horrible war.
If the prophetic words in an ancient text are true, Lorelei can use the magic to save her mother’s life. But when the power she awakens nearly consumes her, the truth about her ancestry and the carnal sins of her family are revealed, forcing Lorelei to face a devastating fact. The boy she loves is fated to kill her. Can she prove the prophecy wrong and use the power of love to combat the supernatural darkness threatening to destroy both worlds?
Michele Barrow-Belisle is an
author and artist living in southern Ontario,
Canada with her
super-sweet husband, brilliant son and ridiculously affectionate cat. Often
told by teachers to stop dreaming and get her head out of the clouds, Michele
still spends much of her time lost in make-believe worlds, populated with
fascinating and occasionally terrifying characters. Her passion for fantasy
extends beyond her writing into her clay figure sculpt-ing, creating
miniaturized replicas of the paranormal beings she writes about. Michele is as passionate
about reading as she is about writing. When she’s not reading or writing, she
can be found burning off that last piece of chocolate cake in a Zumba class, or
sculpting tiny desserts in polymer clay. She also loves mocha lattes and
watching fireflies at twilight. Did we mention she loves chocolate?
Book Trailer:
Links:
Website: www.michelebarrowbelisle.com
Website: www.michelebarrowbelisle.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/michele.barrowbelisle
Facebook Author Page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Michele-Barrow-Belisle-NOVELS/191123740923496
Twitter: www.twitter.com/MicheleBelisle
Pintrest: www.pinterest.com/micheley26
YouTube: www.youtube.com/user/micheley26
Buy LInks:
Amazon Kindle Store: http://www.amazon.com/Fire-Faerie-Song-Trilogy-ebook/dp/B00DRV2KXY/ref=sr_1_4?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1373322084&sr=1-4&keywords=fire+and+ice
Amazon Kindle Store: http://www.amazon.com/Fire-Faerie-Song-Trilogy-ebook/dp/B00DRV2KXY/ref=sr_1_4?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1373322084&sr=1-4&keywords=fire+and+ice
Kobo: http://www.kobobooks.com/search/search.html?q=michele+barrow-belisle
Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/333410
I’d die for him. When
all was said and done, that’s what it came down to. I would give my life in
exchange for his. Only he was immortal, blessed with eternal life. —And I was
the one who was dying. Even after everything we’d been through I still wasn’t
sure what he’d be willing to give in exchange for my life.
Climbing out of bed,
I wandered out to the courtyard, towards the south border of the Wyldewood Forest. Apparently, I’d been granted one
last night to sleep in my room. Adrius had given the guards posted outside my
door his assurance that I wouldn’t try to escape, although there was the
unmistakable click of a lock when he closed the door. Even if it had
occurred to me to use magic to free myself, I wouldn’t have known how. The
powers I’d somehow summoned with Octăhvia had receded to some inaccessible
place deep inside me.
The message that had
arrived hours earlier was as short and curt as the messenger who’d delivered
it. Golden scrawled parchment simply read ‘Meet me in the glen bordering the
south forest before daybreak.’ I’d been awake ever since, too anxious
to sleep.
Sunrise dragged. I wanted to see Adrius again; see that he
was past the worst of whatever he was thinking. I wanted everything to go back
to normal. Normal;
that was funny. Nothing had ever been normal here. In truth, nothing in
my life ever had been.
I waited for what
seemed like an eternity, pacing an uneven groove in the dew-soaked grass. It
wasn’t yet daybreak and the sky was still laced with Mediterranean hues. A soft
breeze carried the fragrance of wild herbs. It caressed my skin and the tiny
hairs on my arm stood on end. I didn’t have to turn around to know who was
behind me.
Adrius. I would
recognize the electricity of his presence blindfolded. He was surreally
gorgeous. Even now as he regarded me with distant, unreadable eyes. He was
aloof; not as angry as he’d been last night, but still not himself. He had sent
for me and so of course, I came. And now here we were in the very place we’d
been when I first arrived in Mythlandria so many weeks ago. There was a
familiarity but also an unnerving strangeness. I didn’t like not knowing what
to expect. Or what he was thinking. I attempted to use the Inner eye
necklace to access his thoughts, but a seerer can see when he’s being read. And
his mind was completely closed to me, leaving me in the dark.
“Walk with me.” He
said with a fleeting gaze.
I took a deep breath
and I followed him, to what could possibly be my end. He was an Elven knight
bound to his father’s will. And right now his will equaled me dead.
The thickness of the
forest encircled us, swallowing us in its mist. Twigs snapped and crunched
beneath our steps and occasionally his arm brushed mine, but he made no attempt
to take my hand. Given the circumstances, it was pretty insane for me to hope
that he might.
By the time the
sunrise peeked through the trees, the silence had become deafening. It was
clear I would have to be the one to break it if I wanted any answers. I didn’t
like feeling so unsure about him. I knew what the curse could do, but I’d
always felt comfortable. Safe. It was different now and I hated it.
“Where are we going?”
I asked a little breathless from the quick pace he’d been keeping.
“Not much further.”
He looked back at me. “Are you cold?”
I was doubly puzzled
by his cryptic behavior. Wintry and detached one minute, worried about my
comfort in the next.
I shook my head,
suddenly aware I was shivering.
That was all he said
before dropping into another uncomfortable stretch of silence. I realized he
didn’t answer my question. It made me cringe to consider why.
Light dappled through
the leaves. Something in the way the beam hit the ground reminded me of my
mother. She’d always loved the play of sunlight. That was one of the reasons
our house had been designed with so many large windows. My stomach twisted. I
missed my mother. My house. My life. I had to go home... but, he could come
with me. That was the best solution. We’d be far from his father, and Venus and
the spell that bound his soul to her and his mind to his father. Far from
Zanthiel. We could pretend to be normal. Human. Finish school and then head off
to college. Together. That was the plan. It could still work. We just had to
get past this. If he could find the strength to spare my life, we’d be halfway
there.
He glanced at me, his
lips pressed in a thin line, and for a moment I wondered if he had been
listening to my thoughts. Then I remembered the chain hanging from my neck, and
the protective pendant blocking his access to my mind, tucked safely inside my
dress.
We climbed uphill
over thick coiled roots still sleeping on the forest floor, which confirmed how
early it was; the trees weren’t even awake yet. Then he stopped so abruptly I
nearly slammed into him. High above the forest below, we stood, still enclosed
by the thickness of trees.
He’ll get over
this. We can get over this. He needs some time, I told myself. The words weren’t very convincing. I
could feel something burning a hole in my chest. Panic maybe.
He turned to face me.
The air was thinner here and I shivered, but not from cold. I felt sick and a
little dizzy, like I was teetering on the edge of a precipice, about to fall. I
tried to steady my breathing. I kept telling myself it was all going to work
out. That everything would be fine. But the look on his face made it impossible
to believe that was true. I twirled a lock of hair around my finger. His eyes
followed my hand, and for a split second his gaze softened. A half smile
touched his lips; that same slightly crooked smile that melted my heart. Only
it didn’t have time to reach his eyes before it faded. Then it was gone, as
quickly as it had come leaving his emotions carefully shielded behind
expressionless eyes. They were still beautiful....they were always
beautiful, but the chill had returned. More than anything I missed their
warmth.
I stood
motionless, unable to breathe. Barely noticing the coiling mist that had risen
and was swirling knee high.
Being alone in the
forest with him used to be my favorite place to be. Now I was chocking from the
dread rising in my throat. For an agonizing length of time he stared at me with
those eyes that once lit up when he looked at me. His jaw tightened, and his
hands clenched and unclenched at his sides. He shifted his weight, and frowned.
A vein in his temples pulsed. Gritting his teeth, his hand reached for his
sword. But then fell away. Raking a hand through his hair once, he finally
broke the throbbing silence.
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