PRINCE OF NIGHT AND STORM

THE FAE PRINCE OF EVERENNE 1

The Dark Fae Prince doesn’t ask permission to take me. He has desire, and unchecked power to inflict it.

Renaud Gautier killed my mother.

I killed his only son in revenge.

Now the sleeping Prince wakes and comes to claim me, the halfling his city scorns, as his Consort.

Our altar is drenched in blood, but if I fight, if I refuse, he will burn the city down.

Our war moves to the High Court where sanity unravels along with eons old secrets.

I am the Mad Dog of Faronne.

But to the ancient Prince, I am much, much more.

 

I lied to you. I schemed. I stole your identity and shrouded mine. I made you love me, and you don’t even know who I really am.

Murder is the least of the lines I will cross to cage you to my side. For this conflict between the Blue Rose and the Trident is nothing.

True war between Ancients looms with you, my soulbound halfling, at the epicenter.

Your destiny, 20,000 years in the making, rises as I remove your veil, and your true power blooms from the abyss where it waits to take you beyond my grasp.

But the Dark will not claim you. You are already mine.

WHERE TO PURCHASE
  • Enemies to Lovers
  • Fated Mates/Soul Bond
  • Morally Gray Male Lead
  • Royalty/Gods
  • Forced Political Marriage
  • Power Imbalance
  • Age Gap (Immortal/Mortal)
  • Hidden Identity
  • Chosen One/Hidden Heritage
  • Court Intrigue/Political Fantasy
  • Obsessive/Possessive Love
  • Trauma Bonding
  • Found Family
  • Romeo & Juliet/Hades and Persephone Retelling
  • Power Imbalances and Corruption
  • Gender and Agency
  • Mental Health Stigma
  • Generational Trauma
  • Love vs. Possession
  • Identity and Belonging
  • The Price of Power
  • Diverse Cast
  • LGBTQIA inclusive
  • Sex Positive (outside of some cultural consent issues)

This is a morally gray adult epic fantasy romance, and no one in this book is nice—no, not even Terreille. Otieno has secrets too.

Themes include:

•  mental health

•  child abuse (not depicted)

•  alcoholism

•  death/murder

The entire effing society has severe issues with consent, so expect some:

•  dubcon

•  lite noncon (there is an argument over consent that is resolved)

 

Footnotes are written by Emma in consultation with Scribe. Some may be unintentionally spoilery cause Emma can’t remember what the Mortal Reader already knows. We avoid any obvious spoils. Mostly, Emma just wants to geek out over languages. Aerinne and Renaud occasionally offer a critical, and rather unwanted, opinion, and we will leave the Mortal Reader to differentiate who is writing the footnote in those cases.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Happy Reading

Coming Soon!

Emma’s Adalessikai Fae are a polyamorous, pansexual, sex positive society. There is utterly NO concept of homophobia.

Virginity is not prized. Promiscuity/whore/slut are not even concepts. They recognize marriage, but when practiced it is for practical or personal reasons, not due to religious views over sexual morality or reproduction.

There is no gender bias or discrimination, and genders are not exclusive to M/F.

They do have their issues. Their caste systems are predicated on power, with all the inherent imbalances that comes along with, and there can still be problems with agency when reproduction is desired for political reasons, because, see power imbalances.

Emma deliberately tried to eliminate as much sexism, gender bias, misogyny  as possible because immortals are already bad enough without that shit thrown in, but the practicalities of having a womb will always possibly put that individual at a disadvantage, especially if they are the vulnerable person in the relationship.

(Emma is a 44 year old mother of 5, and a survivor of domestic abuse. Emma is speaking from vast experience as a womb bearer, and someone who nursed children full time to age 3 while in that situation. Anyone in that position is vulnerable to financial, emotional, and physical abuse, no matter sex. Emma assumes the vulnerability extends to any full time caregiver who is dependent on another party for support.)

When possible, the author intentionally uses gender neutral pronouns unless speaking of a specific individual who has an established gender identity.

The cast is all 30+ (our heroine is the baby, 27 going on 28.) 

The heroine’s father is a human Kenyan, her mother is a “white” Fae. Her paternal family, including her father, are major characters along with her Fae family. She identifies strongly with both cultures. Emma has done her best to represent aspects of the Kikuyu culture with accuracy and respect. (Mainly naming customs, family dynamics, their cuisine and marital customs, since all humans like to eat, and all humans like to get married. So these are the cultural aspects that are the easiest to find firsthand research sources on.)

As a daughter of an ADOS woman (Black American) and white 3rd gen immigrant father (German & English? It’s hazy.) Emma feels her representation of Aerinne as a multi-cultural and racial woman is strongly “own voices.” It is somewhat of wish fulfillment too, since as ADOS, we don’t really know where our African bloodline comes from.

Emma’s other wish fulfillment is the depiction of individual ‘races’ (or phenotypes, because race is a construct) as very much integrated and respective of differences while acknowledging each other’s overall humanity. Basically, Emma wanted to live in a world where being a bi-racial, multi-cultural, multi-religious, and questioning queer, doesn’t fucking suuuuuuck sometimes. 

Happy Reading!

*MAGA. . .fuck all the way off my black queer pro choice Muslim ass. You will find NO refuge in my stories. Questioning or reformed MAGA. . .

. . .as Lord Otieno says, we extend grace, and ask for grace to be likewise extended.

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