Felicity Heaton
Prince of the Underworld and Lord of Water, Esher was banished from his home by his father, Hades, two centuries ago and given a new duty and purpose—to keep our world and his from colliding in a calamity foreseen by the Moirai.
Together with his six brothers, he fights to defend the gates to the Underworld from daemons bent on breaching them and gaining entrance to that forbidden land, striving to protect his home from their dark influence. Tormented by his past, Esher burns with hatred towards mortals and bears a grudge against Hades for forcing him into their world, condemning him to a life of battling to keep a fragile hold on his darker side—a side that wants to kill every human in the name of revenge.
Until he finds himself stepping in to save a female—a beautiful mortal filled with light and laughter who draws him to her as fiercely as the pull of the moon, stirring conflict in his heart and rousing dangerous needs long forgotten.
Aiko knows from the moment she sets eyes on the black-haired warrior that he is no ordinary man, just as she’s no ordinary woman. Blessed with a gift, she can see through his stormy façade to the powerful god beneath, and the pain and darkness that beats inside him—pain she grows determined to heal as she falls deeper under his spell and into his world.
When the daemon bent on turning Esher against his brothers makes her move, will Esher find the strength to overcome his past and fulfil his duty, or will the lure of revenge allow the darkness in his heart to seize control, transforming him into a god intent on destroying the world?
Guardians of Hades is the lastest series by Felicity Heaton, where the sons of Hades protect the gates of Hell and both realms from deamons who wish to control or destroy the world.
Esher in particular, hates his job and the humans he has to protect. With his element being water and the hold on his power so frail, Esher's mood swings always put smile on my face because it rained and rained to match his mood. While all the brothers have their weakness and past, Esher's makeshim vulnerable and dangerous, he loses himself to his dark side and no one but his family matters.
I fell for Esher pretty quick. His dislike for humans and his job made his life hard but he still went on. He's fiercely protective of his family, and won't let anything touch them, but when he meets Aiko, a little mortal girl in danger he feels the need to protect her and keeps going back to her.
Aiko is a medicne student with a wicked sense of fashion. I say this because her clothes make so miuch of her character and add realism to her. She has the hability to see spirits, so she knows Esher isn't like her but that doesn't keep her from wanting him.
The relationship between Esher and Aiko is beautiful. He doesn't trust her right away, and keeps his distance from her at first and Aiko's hability allows her to sense his feelings and needs and that help Esher to give in little by little. I loved how their trust built and watching Esher come out of his shell.
For me, the best however is the brothers' relationship. How they fight and tease and t protect each other is sure to put smile on your face. The description of Tokyo is amazing as well. Felicity makes you feel there. And the traditions and religion of Japon is there as well making the setting perfect. I'd love watching Japon's gods reaction to Esher there though.
While this book can be understood as a stand alone, you only get the love part and a bit of the bigger picture. The series follows the brothers not just while they find their loved ones but facing a terrible enemy who threatens the balance between the human' and the gods' realms, and so is better to read the books in order.
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now
Aiko swung with all her might, striking her
assailant in the face this time. His breath left him in a rush, foul with the
stench of alcohol and cigarettes. He swayed with the strike, but remained
upright, and slurred something obscene at her. She tugged her arm, trying to
twist free of his grip, her heart hammering against her chest, but he tightened
his grip, squeezing her bones.
She gritted her teeth against the pain.
The only other man in the carriage looked
in the opposite direction as she fought with the salaryman. Chikushō. Damn it.
The door beyond the male slid open and she
froze as a handsome foreigner stepped through, his tall frame eating up the
space. Black hair grazed his cheek, shorn short all around the sides but left
long on top, swept forward so it almost obscured one of his eyes.
Those ethereal blue eyes locked on her.
She shivered, cold sweeping through her at
the emptiness they contained, no trace of feeling.
The salaryman tried to pull her towards him
again.
The newcomer strode towards her, his eyes
turning stormy as he shifted them to the person manhandling her and closed the
distance between them.
In the blink of an eye, his right hand
closed around the man’s throat and he was off her, slammed against the train
door by the foreigner who stood at least eight inches taller than him. The man
leaned in close to the drunk, looked as if he wanted to say something as the
salaryman began babbling in fear, and then eased back.
She thought he might release the man.
He pulled him away from the door, and
slammed him back against it with enough force that the man passed out and the
entire carriage jolted. The foreigner huffed as he released the man and watched
him slump to the floor, and wiped his hand on his coat, as if the man had some
sort of disease that he didn’t want to get.
When he turned towards her, those stormy
blue eyes lowering to meet hers, she bent forwards and dropped her head.
“Thank you,” she said in English, hopeful
that he would understand and would hear the true measure of her gratitude in
her voice. It shook as she bowed several times, unable to stop herself as her
adrenaline waned and all the fear it had been holding at bay swept over her.
He responded in perfect Japanese. “Don’t
ride alone so late at night, or at least use the women-only carriage.”
She wanted to tell him that the women-only
carriage wasn’t available on the last trains, but held her tongue, not wanting
to appear ungrateful for his help. She nodded, rubbed the tears from her face
with the back of her hand and sniffed as she straightened.
The man looked her over, his eyes revealing
nothing to her. They settled on her hands as she clutched her backpack, and she
tried to stop them from trembling, but no matter what she did, they kept
shaking.
“Are you alright?” he said in Japanese
again, and she swore there was a flicker of concern in those words even if it
didn’t show in his eyes.
She nodded again. “Fine.”
The train eased to a halt and the doors
slid open, and relief crashed over her when she saw it was her stop. She
stepped off the train, glaring at the sleeping salaryman as she passed, tempted
to level a kick at him. When she looked back to thank the stranger again, he
was stood on the platform beside her, his eyes dark as he stared at the man,
looking as if he wanted to do more than just kick him.
He huffed as he turned away, his motions
stiff, as if he had to fight himself to do it, and muttered, “Fuck.”
Aiko followed his gaze to the station sign.
The way he sighed had her eyes roaming back
to him. He was at least seven inches taller than her, and probably would have
been closer to ten above her five-six height if she hadn’t been wearing her
shoes. A black cotton coat that reached the ankles of his worn leather boots
hugged his slender frame, tight to his chest but flared from his waist. The
split down the front revealed blue jeans tucked into the tops of his army
boots.
He shifted back a step, placing more
distance between them, and looked away from her, back in the direction the
train had come. “Guess I’m walking.”
She had studied English in school, and took
classes at her university, so she knew enough to understand him and the
implications of his words—he had missed his stop.
“I could call… you… a cab.” She managed,
with only a few pauses to think of the right words.
While she studied English, she didn’t get
to practice it much. Her parents didn’t know it, and she only got to speak it
with her classmates, and a lot of the time they only wanted to speak Japanese
and were just learning English so they could put it on their résumé.
He shook his head but didn’t look at her.
She thought about going ahead and calling
him a taxi anyway, her eyes drifting back down the height of him as she
considered it. Her gaze stopped on his hand.
Blood covered the side of it.
“You’re hurt,” she said in English and
pointed to his hand.
He looked at it as if it was nothing and
wasn’t bothering him at all.
Had he done it when helping her?
“Chikushō,” she muttered to herself and
thoughts of hailing him a cab were replaced by ones about returning the favour
by helping him. It was risky, but she owed him, and she couldn’t let him go
without tending to the wound. She just hoped he knew enough Japanese to
understand her. She pointed to his hand again. “My parents run a small clinic
below our house. I can help with that.”
He regarded her with cold assessing eyes,
and she had the feeling he was the one who didn’t trust her.
As if she could hurt him.
He was far more powerful than she was, and
had proven it on the train. She wasn’t a threat to him.
So why did he look as if she might be?
It was there in his eyes as she looked
deeper into them, and she could feel it as she focused on him.
Just a glimmer
of a feeling, but it was there. Hazy, but clear enough that she could name the
emotion.
Part of him feared her.
“I would like to help,” she added softly,
and he looked back down at his hand again, the black slashes of his eyebrows
meeting hard above his darkening eyes.
When he lifted them back to her, they were
colder than before, and she moved back a step as a feeling went through her,
one that warned her away from him. He glanced over his shoulder again, and then
back at the station sign.
Sugamo.
Which stop had he wanted?
“Why would you trust me?” His deep voice
rolled over her, his accent almost perfect.
If she closed her eyes, she could easily
fool herself into thinking she was talking to a Japanese man, not a foreigner.
Where had he learned her language? He spoke
it as if he had been doing it every day of his life. Had he been born in Japan?
No, she could feel that he hadn’t been born
in this land, that he didn’t really belong here. It was a sensation that he
didn’t fit or wasn’t welcome, one that most people would put down to instinct,
but that ran deeper in her.
In her blood.
She studied his face as she answered him.
“Why wouldn’t I?”
He frowned at her. “Because I could be
trying to get into your tiny panties too.”
She doubted he wanted to do such a thing,
the emotions she had detected in him pointing towards a desire to get away from
her as quickly as possible rather than get closer to her, yet his words sent a
thrill through her, followed by a heat that had her pulse picking up pace.
“Come with me, or don’t. I won’t force
you.” She turned away, slipped her arms into her black satin coffin-shaped
backpack and strode towards the exit.
When she didn’t feel him following, she
resisted the temptation to look back. She had offered him help, extended a hand
to him. It was down to him to take it.
Aiko passed through the barriers and out
onto the street. It was quiet, no cars moving along it, but she looked in both
directions anyway before hurrying across to the other side.
“How far is the clinic?” His voice arrested
her steps and she looked back at him where he stood in the entrance of the
station, his left arm wrapped around him and the late-spring breeze stirring
the damp lengths of his black hair.
“A mile.” She pointed in the direction.
His face darkened. She presumed it wasn’t
the distance irritating him, but the fact she had intended to walk a mile
through the maze of streets alone in the early hours of morning. She did it all
the time, and she wasn’t the only woman in Tokyo who had the same habit.
He looked as if he wanted to tell her to
hail a cab for herself and then said something, but she didn’t catch the words
as she watched the emotions flitter across his handsome face, a kaleidoscope of
them that moved so swiftly she couldn’t take them all in. Fear was there
though. For himself still, or for her? Did he worry about her walking alone at
night? Something akin to anguish crossed his face more than once too, and that
emotion was there in his eyes as he reluctantly crossed the road to her.
What internal war did he wage?
His question earlier had revealed more
about himself than anything he had said or done so far.
He found it difficult to trust, so he
couldn’t understand how others could do it so easily.
She could trust him, because if he had
wanted to get into her ‘tiny panties’ he probably would have done it when they
had been standing on the platform of the station for ten minutes, not a soul in
sight.
He had stopped the pervert on the train
too, revealing a noble streak in his actions.
“You’ll probably get yourself killed if I
let you go home alone,” he muttered in English, and she understood enough to
get the meaning of his words.
He wasn’t coming with her so she could look
at his wound. He was walking her home because he wanted to protect her.
Book
1: Ares
Book 2: Valen
Book 3: Esher
Book 4: Marek – Coming in 2018
Book 2: Valen
Book 3: Esher
Book 4: Marek – Coming in 2018
Felicity Heaton is a New York Times and USA
Today international best-selling author writing passionate paranormal romance
books. In her books, she creates detailed worlds, twisting plots, mind-blowing
action, intense emotion and heart-stopping romances with leading men that vary
from dark deadly vampires to sexy shape-shifters and wicked werewolves, to
sinful angels and hot demons! If you're a fan of paranormal romance authors
Lara Adrian, J R Ward, Sherrilyn Kenyon, Gena Showalter and Christine Feehan
then you will enjoy her books too.
If you love your angels a little dark and
wicked, the best-selling Her Angel series is for you. If you like strong,
powerful, and dark vampires then try the Vampires Realm series or any of her
stand-alone vampire romance books. If you’re looking for vampire romances that
are sinful, passionate and erotic then try the best-selling Vampire Erotic
Theatre series. Or if you prefer huge detailed worlds filled with hot-blooded
alpha males in every species, from elves to demons to dragons to shifters and
angels, then take a look at the new Eternal Mates series.
If you want to know more about Felicity, or
want to get in touch, you can find her at the following places:
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