Grand Central Publishing sent me LETHAL RIDER (Lords of
Deliverance Book 3) by Larissa Ione
below you will find a quick description and book excerpt. Now it is time to let someone else enjoy it
and I am going to provide my copy to one lucky winner. To be eligible to win please leave a comment on “what do children do that scares you?”. The winner for this book will be posted on
Sunday – July 15th and will have two-weeks to email me their address. My contest rules stipulate that you must leave
a comment, and come back to see if you
have won so you can email me with your address.
Thank you for
reading my blog, leaving a comment, and I hope looking over my review. You have so many choices out there in the
blogging world but I want you to know I appreciate you coming here. Never forget we are all fighting our own
demons be please be thankful for something every day and celebrate that Little Victory. Mary
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From Larissa’s
website I was provide a description:
They are here. They ride. The Four
Horsemen of the Apocalypse.
Thanatos,
the most deadly Horseman of the Apocalypse, has endured thousands of years of
celibacy to prevent the end of days. But just one night with the wickedly sexy
Aegis Guardian, Regan Matthews, shatters centuries of resolve. Yet their
passion comes with a price. And Thanatos must face a truth more terrifying than
an apocalypse-he's about to become a father.
Demon-slayer
Regan Matthews never imagined herself the maternal type, but with the fate of
the world hanging in the balance she had no choice but to seduce Thanatos and
bear his child. Now, as the final battle draws closer and his rage at being
betrayed is overshadowed by an undeniable passion for the mother of his child,
Thanatos has a life-shattering realization: To save the world, he must
sacrifice the only thing he's ever wanted-a family.
And an excerpt
Regan
Matthews was going to die.
She
knew it as sure as she knew the sky was blue. Knew it as sure as she knew the
baby inside her was a boy.
Knew
it as sure as she knew the baby’s father would be the one to end her life.
Screaming,
she bolted upright in bed, her eyes focusing on the glow of the nightlight in
the bathroom. It took a second to realize she was awake, safe and secure inside
The Aegis’s Berlin headquarters.
The
dream had come to her again, the one where she saw herself lying on a floor and
covered in her own blood, too much blood. Thanatos, known to much of the human
population as Death, fourth Horseman of the Apocalypse, knelt next to her,
blood coating his hands, dripping from his pale hair, and splashed across his
bone armor.
She
took a deep, calming breath, forcing herself to relax. Thanatos couldn’t touch
her. Not here, in the apartment complex deep below the headquarters building
that housed the twelve Elders who ran the ancient demon-hunting organization.
Most of the Elders used their apartments only when they came to Germany for Aegis
business, but Regan had called this spartan apartment home for years, and
despite the fact that she was due to give birth in less than a month, she
hadn’t done a single thing to prepare for the baby. There would be no
decorating, no toys, no cribs.
She’d
always hated pastels anyway.
Her
hand, so pregnancy swollen that she no longer wore her Sigil ring, trembled as
she rubbed her belly through the cotton fabric of the maternity nightgown,
hoping the baby would stay asleep. He was one hell of a kicker, and her organs
were still recovering from his last round of hackeysack.
Regan
fumbled in the darkness for the bedside table lamp. Her hand fell first to the
hellhound-spit coated Aegis dagger all twelve Elders were required to carry as
defense against evil Horsemen, and then to the bit of parchment next to the
lamp. She allowed herself a moment to smooth her fingers over the inked
lettering. The Latin words were a prayer of sorts, but that wasn’t where Regan
found comfort.
No,
as a psychometric empath, she could divine information with a touch or, more
specifically, feel the emotions of the person who put ink to skin. This
particular bit of writing had been penned while the author was feeling serene.
Regan had kept the page with her for years, borrowing the emotions of the
author like some sort of psychic vampire, and she’d needed it more than ever
over these last few months.
With
one Horseman turned evil, his Seal broken according to the Daemonica’s, the
demon bible’s, prophecy, the earth was falling into chaos. No apocalypse
promised a party, but Regan often wondered why they couldn’t be dealing with
the Bible’s prophecy instead. At least in the Biblical version, the Horsemen
would be fighting on the side of good instead of evil.
But
that was only part of why she’d needed the parchment. Her regret over what
she’d done to Thanatos ate at her, and she while she didn’t deserve anything
less, for the baby’s sake she had to find peace where she could.
She
allowed the parchment to soothe her for another thirty seconds, thankful to
have it. The final page from a tiny book penned by an angel who had given her
life to save a Guardian, it was beyond priceless. Regan’s fellow Elders had
been after Regan to give it up for years, but they’d have to wait. She wasn’t
giving it up until she was dead.
Which
might be sooner than she’d like, if Thanatos got hold of her.
She
lifted her fingers from the parchment, but before she found the lamp switch, a
noise froze her. It wasn’t a loud sound, and in fact, she thought the echo of footsteps
might be in her head. But what she couldn’t dismiss was the trickle of
awareness that filtered through her system, an internal alarm that made no
sense.
No
place on Earth was safer than where she was right now.
Still,
she found herself fisting her dagger and easing out of bed. Heart pounding, she
crept across the room and put her ear to the door. Nothing. So why was her
entire body quivering with static undercurrents that warned of danger?
You’re
just being paranoid.
The nightmare about Thanatos must have freaked her out more than usual.
But
it couldn’t hurt to check things out. Her Guardian instincts had never failed
her, and she’d known more than one Guardian who had paid the price of ignoring
that deep-down sense that something was amiss.
As
quickly and silently as possible, she tugged on a maternity blouse and a pair
of khaki pants, and at her waist she secured her weapon belt and cell phone
clip. She didn’t go anywhere without being armed. She traded out the dagger
with a stang, preferring the double-ended, S-shaped blade in battle.
Clutching
the stang in a white-knuckled grip, she opened the door and slipped out into
the hallway. The darkness, usually her friend, now became a liability without
her Aegis ring, which would have lent a measure of night-vision.
Regan
put her back to the wall and moved toward the light switch outlined in a faint
green glow. But when she flipped it, nothing happened.
“Just
a burned-out bulb,” she whispered to herself. She even said it again, but a
niggling sense of doubt joined the feelings of danger.
She
glanced back toward her room, wondering if her smartest option was to go back
inside and lock the door, but duh…anything that was a threat to her inside
Aegis headquarters wasn’t going to be stopped by a measly slab of wood and a
twenty-dollar lock.
Besides,
she had a secret weapon, one she’d been forbidden to use — unless the baby’s
life was in danger.
She crept forward, the hairs on the back of her neck prickling with every step.
She crept forward, the hairs on the back of her neck prickling with every step.
“Who’s
there?” There was no answer, but then, no demon would happily offer up his
name.
The
baby had clearly turned her brain to mush, and she’d become a classic horror
movie dipshit who got killed in the first five minutes of the film. Awesome.
She
thought she saw a flicker of movement ahead, near the entrance to the
auditorium. Where was everyone? Even in the middle of the night, Guardians
patrolled the building or spent shifts researching in the massive library or
organizing worldwide operations. This was The Aegis’s nerve center, and it was
never this quiet.
She
moved closer, and as she reached for the door, her foot slipped in something
warm and wet. Her stomach did a flip-flop. She didn’t have to look to know
she’d stepped in blood, didn’t need lights to know that the dark lump against
the wall was a body.
Not
good. This was so not good.
Something
rustled behind her. Instinct kicked in, propelling her forward through the
auditorium doors. It was set up like a large college classroom, with several
rows of stadium seats and two aisles of steps. She moved as fast as she could
to the stage at the bottom. If she could get to the exit on the far side, she’d
come out near the reception desk, where she could sound the alarm—
A
soundless blur streaked past her. She pivoted, stang at the ready, adrenaline
coursing in a hot rush. Crimson eyes stared at her, and she swore she heard the
sound of saliva dripping to the floor.
“Whore.”
The deep, masculine voice rumbled, and in her belly, the baby kicked.
“I
don’t know who you are,” Regan said, “but you might think twice about insulting
a Guardian inside her own house.”
Rumbling
laughter accompanied a snap of fingers, and suddenly, the auditorium lights
popped on. A vampire stood on the stage with her, over six feet of hulking,
fangy, undead. His gaze fell pointedly to her belly.
“It
isn’t an insult if it’s the truth.”
She
ignored the barb that hit a little too close to home. “Who are you? How did you
get in here?”
At
some point, Regan had placed her hand over the baby, as if doing so would keep
it safe. Idiot.
The stang in her other hand would do more — but only if she could cut the
bloodsucker’s head off.
The
vampire moved so fast Regan didn’t see it until its backswing connected with
her cheek. Pain ricocheted from her jaw to her cheekbone and up to her skull as
she slammed into the wall, her left shoulder taking the brunt of the impact.
“Who
I am won’t matter when you and the Horseman’s bastard are dead.” He hissed, his
enormous fangs dripping saliva like a rabid dog.
There
was something very…off…about this vampire. Not that most vampires weren’t
“off,” but she’d noticed a subtle difference between Thanatos’s daywalker
vampires and your everyday variety nightwalker. Namely, Than’s vamps seemed
bigger, their fangs especially so.
“You’re
one of Thanatos’s servants, aren’t you?”
He
snarled. “I belong to no one. I’m not one of the Bludrexe’s neutered pets.” He came at her
again, and as she struck out with the stang, she lost her balance and managed
only a glancing blow that nicked his biceps.
The
vampire’s hand snapped out, catching her around the throat. Smiling coldly, he
squeezed, cutting off her breath.
Panic
wrapped around her, squeezing as hard as the vampire’s fingers. She might have
had a chance if she weren’t almost nine months pregnant, but even though she’d
kept herself in excellent shape, she tired quickly, and her uneven weight made
her awkward.
She
couldn’t die like this. She couldn’t let this baby die. But as her lungs began
to burn with a lack of oxygen, she knew this could be it.
Inhaling
hard to find even a molecule of oxygen, she reached deep inside herself for the
ability she’d kept tightly leashed for most of her life. The ability that had
gone out of control the night she had gotten pregnant.
Not
the time to dwell on that.
The
tingle started low in her gut. Coaxing it as if it were a stray kitten, she
called it forth, but it seemed to retreat, going from a pinpoint of light to a
sickly glow. And then it snuffed out completely. What the—
“Die,
bitch.” The vampire hissed in her face.
Shit!
Her power…she couldn’t access it. Suddenly, the vampire inexplicably eased up
on his grip, giving her a sweet gulp of air, and when he smiled, she knew why
he’d done it.
To
drag out her death.
“Fucker,”
she rasped. She clawed at his shoulders and kicked at his shins, but he didn’t
budge. Again she searched for her ability, the one that would drag his soul
right out of him, but now it was if it didn’t exist at all.
Her
mind went sluggish, her struggles weakening as oxygen depravation took its
toll. Images flipped through her brain, but not the ones she’d have expected
while on the brink of death.
People
lied about your life flashing before your eyes, because all she could see was
Thanatos. She remembered how he looked when he was coming, how his body
strained and his muscles bunched and rolled. She remembered the sound of his
voice, his laugh.
And
she remembered the expression on his face when he realized she’d betrayed him.
She
was going to die, and it would all have been for nothing.
In
her belly, the baby kicked, harder and harder, as if it too knew the end was
near. The vampire smiled.
“I can sense the life within you,” he said. “I’m going to enjoy feeling it snuff out.” His hand went to her swollen abdomen, and in her mind, she screamed.
“I can sense the life within you,” he said. “I’m going to enjoy feeling it snuff out.” His hand went to her swollen abdomen, and in her mind, she screamed.
“Could
you two be any louder?” A stranger’s voice joined the scream in her mind and
the thud of her pulse in Regan’s ears just as a breeze whispered over her skin.
In
the next instant, the vampire flew sideways and she was ripped out of his grip.
She had only a split second to see the other vampire who had joined the party
before he flung her aside. She hit the floor behind the podium and sat there,
gasping for air as the newcomer, one she definitely recognized as one of
Thanatos’s daywalker servants, attacked the vampire who had been trying to kill
her.
The
newcomer slammed his fist into the first vamp’s head, sending him reeling into
the wall. Before he could recover, the new vampire shoved a splinter of wood —
where he’d gotten it, she had no idea — into the other vamp’s chest. The first
vampire hissed even as his body began to blacken and crack into dust.
The
surviving vampire limped over to her, fury and pain mingling in his eyes. “You
betrayed Thanatos,” he growled. “You betrayed us all.”
She
wasn’t sure about the “all” thing, but the rest was true enough. “Then why did
you save me?”
“Save
you?” The vampire gestured to the ashy mess that used to be his brethren. “He
was merely going to kill you. I’m taking you to Thanatos.” He grinned. “Trust
me, I didn’t save
you.”

I'm always very wary about children & cars. Children can be so unpredictable & just dash out before you blink. That scares me about children. Children themselves don't scare me. I work with them.
ReplyDeleteEverything especially if they are under the age of 5. I think running and not looking were they are running scares me the most.
ReplyDeleteMy children are grown but that doesn't stop me from worrying about them - just the daily process of living and them being out in the world can be scary. At least I had some control when they were little lol.
ReplyDeleteI still worry about my kids driving on the roads, even though they are grown adults. It scares me to death when I see how some people drive. I guess that I will never get over this fear.
ReplyDeleteIt scares me when a little kid starts to fall toward something hard or sharp; it scares me when a bigger kid doesn't think before they act (even when this time it came out ok)
ReplyDeleteWhat scares me is that kids have no fear. They do not understand that they can't just do anything and not get hurt, either physically or emotionally. My son is 7 yeara old and has no fear. I caught him with a small ladder up nest to the dog house and was trying to climb onto the garage. He scared the crap out of me. Larissa is a new author fo me. This book and series look awesome.
ReplyDeleteChristinebails@yahoo.com
i dont think i scared something when child but being old there are so many scare now ;/
ReplyDeleteI agree with the fears others have expressed. What also scares me is children bullying others.
ReplyDeleteIt's so true that kids have no fear. I've seen it with my grandsons.
ReplyDeleteI just read this so don't enter me in the giveaway, but I wanted to say this is such a great book and series. oh my I loved this book.
ReplyDeleteI agree kids have no fear, they don't understand that they can get hurt and it makes us adults crazy.
What children do that scares me is when they can just suddenly make a dash to run off somewhere to seek out the thing that catches their eye as it can be very dangerous out on the streets like that.
ReplyDeleteWhen they do something they know they shouldn't do
ReplyDelete