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Hunter's Season: Elder Races
Hunter's Season: Elder Races
Hunter's Season: Elder Races
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Hunter's Season: Elder Races

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This title was previously published and is being rereleased by the author. It has not been revised.

As an assassin for the Dark Fae, Xanthe always wore a mask, hiding her emotions to do her duty. But when her identity is compromised, she trades undercover work for guarding Queen Niniane—a position that often brings her in contact with Chancellor Aubrey Riordan.

A year ago Aubrey’s wife tried to assassinate their new queen in his name, a betrayal of everything he believes in. And now an attack on his life proves the dark conspiracy is not yet over. Although injured and weak, Aubrey can’t help but be drawn to the shy assassin and loyal protector to the queen. Xanthe is everything Naida wasn’t, and the passion she stirs in him is something he thought had long passed him by.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 12, 2017
ISBN9781947046979
Hunter's Season: Elder Races

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Rating: 3.92999994 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A very nice novella about two adult people coming together.

    Xantha has been in love with the dark fey chancellor Aubrey for some time. As she has to protect him and care for him after an attempted assassination, he slowly falls in love with her, too. It was a beautiful littel tale. For me missing was a bit of humor or some suspense.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is one of my favorite Elder Races novella's to date. I wouldn't have pictured Aubrey as a hero, but he definitely pulled it off. The romance in HUNTER'S SEASON packs a lot of punch, mainly due to Harrison's elegant pacing. She sets up a well written backdrop, then zooms in on the couple to let their emotions develop. The balance of power and personalities in this story are particularly interesting. Once again, Harrison has written sex scenes that are not just hot but perfect for her characters. Borderline five stars, if I come back and re-read it in the future, it will definitely get that extra star.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Review courtesy of Dark Faerie TalesQuick & Dirty: Paranormal Fae romance between a soldier and a politician, filled with danger both in and out of the bedroom!Opening Sentence: As soon as Xanthe reached Adriyel, she left her mount at the palace stable and sent a message to Her Majesty’s Chief of Security that said: “It is done.” The Review:Hunter’s Season is a wonderful look into the Other land, particularly the Dark Fae city of Adriyel. Xanthe, introduced in the previous novella Devil’s Gate, has returned home upon the completion of her latest assignment. But being back has her heart in turmoil. The crush she has nursed for Chancellor Riordan has only grown stronger with time. When he becomes the target of an assassination attempt, she does everything in her power to keep him safe. Sparks fly and love ignites in this fabulous ending of a three-part novella series set within the enchanting world of the Elder Races.Xanthe Tenanye is an assassin in the Dark Fae Military. Now that there has been a regime change and her thirst for revenge fulfilled, she is feeling out of step. Xanthe is furiously loyal to the new Queen and is given the honor of serving as one of her personal guards. It is just an added bonus that she gets to see the sexy and regal Aubrey much more than before. Her compassion and her sense of duty are at times both an asset and a hindrance in the romance department. Xanthe is most assuredly torn between her heart and her mind. Will she be able to reconcile the two before the opportunity of love everlasting passes her by?Lord Aubrey Riordan is one the most relaxed Dark Fae I have ever seen. Yes, his past is full of bitterness and betrayal but he doesn’t really let it affect his day to day life. He also doesn’t use it as an excuse to hide behind either. Once Aubrey finally noticed the wonderful woman before him, he started doing everything he could to make her his; position and rank be damned. I loved the fact that even though his pride was hurt by her help, he didn’t lessen her gift. He chose instead to honor her sacrifice for him and helped in any way he could. The fact that he treated her as an equal was both heartwarming and sigh-worthy. Love should be a partnership if it is to stand the test of time.The big threat in Hunter’s Season falls on threats toward Aubrey. Who is behind all of these dastardly deeds? Can Xanthe keep them both safe until the culprit is found? Will Aubrey fight for who and what he wants? And why is Niniane looking at them with that little gleam in her eye?An unexpected and whole-heartedly fabulous added bonus to this novella is a quick update on Tiago and Niniane. The new Queen of the Dark Fae and her Head of Security, Tiago, have been adjusting to life in the royal arena quite well. Those fae that supported the previous King have been “disposed” of and now they have the opportunity to look forward. They are still just as adorable together as they were in their book, Storm’s Heart. The one insight that we are privy to are the things that most couples begin to think about when their lives are settled. Though the answers are not forthcoming, the hope remains for a continued happy ever after for the faerie and thunderbird.This is the conclusion to the three part novella mini-story surrounding the mysterious tarot deck and its owners. Though the deck is an object of Power and the catalyst for several key events, there is still a sense of vagueness surrounding it. Yes, there were answers to some of the questions about the deck and its history. Yes, the journey did end. Yet, even after all of this I find myself vaguely unsatisfied. I suppose I expected the tarot deck to have a more important role in the forefront of the last story, not staying in the background like some weird puppet master’s strings.Given all of that, Hunter’s Season was beautifully written and well rounded for a novella. The pace was consistent as well as the characters themselves. Everything felt genuine, from the self-depreciation to the crazy twist ending. I find myself enjoying ALL of the stories found within The Elder Race’s series, and that is not something I can often boast of. Harrison is a tremendously gifted writer and I wait with baited breathe for the next book from her.Notable Scene:The smell of cooking steak wafted out of the cottage, and his stomach growled. His appetite for food had come back with a vengeance. It was a solid metaphor, as his appetite for other things had now resurfaced. He had sustained two serious injuries, one spiritual and the other physical, and it appeared that he would end up surviving them both after all.As for the quiet, reserved Xanthe-he could see nothing to hold him back from going after what he know acknowledged that he wanted. He no longer had any ties or previous commitments. He was free to act on whatever he desired.Now it was time for his own hunting season.FTC Advisory: Samhain Publishing graciously provided me with a copy of Hunter’s Season. No goody bags, sponsorships, “material connections,” or bribes were exchanged for my review. The only payment received came in the form of hugs and kisses from my little boys.

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Hunter's Season - Thea Harrison

Chapter One

Hearth

As soon as Xanthe reached Adriyel, she left her mount at the palace stable and sent a message to Her Majesty’s Chief of Security that said: It is done.

Xanthe did not sign the note. He would know who had sent it. She did not expect a quick response either. With the completion of her assignment, any urgency or need for action had ceased.

Because she had been gone to America for some time, she stopped at the marketplace to buy food: fresh bread, meat, eggs, vegetables and fruit. The familiarity of the task soothed nerves that were tired and stressed from living with too much strangeness and danger for so long.

At midafternoon, the best of the goods had already been picked over, but there was still enough variety to meet her immediate needs. The market stalls were stocked with meat and fish, vegetables, fruit and grains from nearby farms, a variety of cooked foods, beautiful cloths of rich colors and intricate needlework, pottery, spices, soaps and metal work, and the recent, jarring addition of American goods. Hawkers called their wares, and the smells of cooking food wafted along the narrow cobblestone streets.

Xanthe paused as the small creature she carried in her pack stirred. A small creature might be too hungry to wait until she had cooked supper. After a moment’s thought, she backtracked to the baker’s stall to buy a meat pie. Her last purchase was an earthenware jug of fresh milk and a small tub of soft cheese. When she had finished the milk and the cheese, she would return the jug and the tub to the dairyman.

The wriggling in her pack became more urgent.

Patience, she said to it.

Then she walked out of the city, down the narrow road that hugged the river for a couple of miles to the overgrown path that led to the small two-room cottage that had been her home for her entire life. Ignoring the increasingly strong wriggles in the pack on her back, she studied the cottage as she approached. It had a neglected air about it, as well it should, since she had been gone for over four seasons, but the roof looked solid enough. It led her to hope that the inside was dry.

She opened the door and looked into the shadowed, dusty interior. For a moment, it all looked too rustic, small and strange. Then the strangeness of the last several moons—months, they were called in America—fell from her eyes, and the cottage became once again as familiar to her as the back of her own hand, and she was home.

She remembered something a human had once said to her while she had been in the strange tent city at Devil’s Gate in the American state named Nevada. The human had been sunburned and had worn a cynical expression when he said, You know how that old saying goes—you can’t go home again.

Xanthe had never been to America before, and she didn’t know how the saying went. She wasn’t sure what the human had meant.

She eased her packages onto the dusty table, shrugged out of her pack and set it carefully on the floor, and took off the shoulder harness that carried her sword, straightening tired shoulders. The day had already been full of travel, and there was still much to do before she could rest that night.

She propped the door open to the fresh, cooling air of the evening. Now the small creature in her pack was voicing shrill unhappiness. It sounded like a crying baby. She opened the pack and pulled out a thin, wriggling orange striped kitten that leaped out of her hands onto the table and circled the wrapped meat pie and dairy, meowing piteously.

Yes, I know, Xanthe told it. But you must wait a moment or two longer.

She had fallen into the habit of talking to the kitten on the trip from the crossover passage to Adriyel. They had developed a habit of sorts in the evenings on the short three day journey—the kitten would fall asleep, purring, either on her lap or beside the campfire while Xanthe studied the lovely hand painted cards of the Tarot deck she had been given by a Vampyre and two medusae on her trip to Chicago, to the crossover passageway that led back home.

People in America had such an odd term for places like Adriyel. They called them Other lands, but to Xanthe, America was the Other land.

Most of the time the kitten seemed to enjoy the sound of her voice, but it wasn’t interested in conversation at the moment. It swatted at the pie and meowed again, showing slender sharp white teeth and a tiny pink tongue.

Xanthe checked the cupboard that held the crockery. Along with all the other furniture in the cottage, her father had built the cupboard well out of hard seasoned wood. No small creatures had taken up residence in it, so she wiped out a bowl with the bottom of her sleeve, poured some milk into it and set it on the floor.

As the purring kitten leaped down and began to lap at the creamy liquid, she unwrapped and broke open the meat pie. It was still hot. Fragrant steam rose from the middle. She scraped meat and gravy onto a dish, blew on it until it had cooled slightly and set it on the floor by the bowl of milk.

While the kitten gorged itself on supper, Xanthe set to work. She dusted and swept out spiders and a few mice nests. With the kitten as a mouser, they wouldn’t be back. Then she brought in half rotted wood from the small pile left under the lean-to, started a fire, uncovered the well and drew water, diced the raw meat and vegetables into a pot and set it over the fire to cook, washed the table and chairs, dragged the mattress out of the simple bedroom and beat it until the clouds of dust stopped rising, dragged it back inside and unpacked the linens and blankets that had been stored with fragrant cedar chips in a chest.

Her earlier tiredness was rapidly turning to exhaustion. She could have stayed in the city overnight and faced the long neglected cottage in the morning, but she had been too anxious to return to wait. After making the bed, she checked the bubbling pot that hung over the fire. Her mind was filled with visions of how pleasurable it would be to eat a hot bowl of stew and fall into the bed, when a gigantic shadow darkened her doorway.

The kitten shot past her feet, looking panicked, all its fur standing straight up. Xanthe raised her eyebrows as she turned to watch it race into the bedroom. It disappeared under the bed.

Then she turned to the doorway where a massive dark man stood, dressed in severe black. It was the Dark Fae Queen’s chief of security, Lord Tiago Black Eagle, thunderbird Wyr and forever alien in the heartland of the Dark Fae.

Surprised, she bowed to her employer. Welcome, my lord. Please do come in.

His features were as severe as his clothing. He looked foreign to eyes that were used to the slim build, large gray eyes and pale skin of the Dark Fae, but Xanthe had since gotten used to his harsh face and imposing demeanor.

Obsidian eyes narrowed as he stared in the direction of the kitten also. Tenanye, he said, greeting her in that abrupt way of his that no longer seemed quite so odd after her sojourn in America. I believe I told you to stop calling me that. Tiago will do just fine. What the hell is that doing here?

She raised her eyebrows again as he gestured to the bedroom. The kitten? she asked. I found it wandering the grounds on the other side of the crossover passageway in Chicago, so I brought it with me.

The crossover passageway from Adriyel to Chicago was located on an eighty-acre tract of land just northwest of the Chicago’s downtown Loop area. The grounds held a large Georgian style mansion and were bordered by a tall stone wall that was topped with rolls of barbed wire, but the front gates were made of wrought iron and since Adriyel had opened its borders, more often than not, now those gates stood open.

None of the Dark Fae staff at the mansion would adopt a companion animal, but along with giving open access to other creatures, there was more than enough opportunity for urban wildlife to take advantage of the open gates and slip into the large, wooded area.

Tiago gave her a strange look then brushed past her to stride into the bedroom. Come out from under there, he said firmly.

Xanthe stared at him, her tired mind blank with astonishment.

The kitten slunk out from underneath the bed. It seemed even tinier and more delicate as it hunched at the Wyr lord’s feet.

A wave of heat prickled Xanthe’s skin as horrified comprehension began to dawn.

Tiago looked down at the small creature, hands on his hips. It stared up at him, still looking panicked, eyes completely round and fur bristling.

He ordered, Change.

The kitten shapeshifted and became a dirty, unkempt girl who stared, seemingly mesmerized at the immense male in front of her. Tiago angled his jaw out and tilted his head at Xanthe.

Xanthe rubbed her forehead, her shoulders slumped. Oh, gods, she said. I kidnapped a little Wyr girl.

She never once changed in front of you? Tiago asked.

No, sir. I had no idea. You know my magic sense is minimal. Xanthe had telepathy and the ability to traverse crossover passageways. She could also sense some Power in strong items and individuals, but without a Wyr’s sense of smell, she hadn’t any way to tell that the kitten was anything but what it seemed. She lifted her shoulders. I thought I was rescuing a feral cat.

Well, Tiago said after a moment. I’ll take her back to the palace with me. Niniane will know how to take care of this. He shot a look at Xanthe. As for you, I will be in touch. I want to hear details about what happened.

Understood, my l—sir, Xanthe said.

The little girl tore her gaze away from the towering figure in front of her to look at Xanthe. She whispered, I want to stay here.

Immediately and in unison, Xanthe and Tiago said, That can’t happen.

"You named

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