Happy Monday Everyone!! Time to get back to the grind after such a long and lovely holiday, I know it sucks, but this should put a spring in your step! Welcome to this stop on Danielle's tour of Ghosts of Winter. This was a completely delightful and heart-wrenching short. Let's take a look at the book details and peep inside:
The notorious pair travels to Jokkmokk, Sweden to battle an ancient and angry force haunting the rural property of a retired hunter who once ran with Skriker in his youth. There they will discover that the ice holds many secrets…and sometimes those secrets can be deadly.
**Publisher’s Warning: This ain’t your grandma’s Christmas tale! Contains foul language, violence, and sex so steamy it could melt glacial ice!*
Danielle D. Smith is both a writer of gritty "outside
the mainstream" paranormal tales, and an accomplished fine artist and
illustrator whose visual work has appeared in various public, private, and
gallery exhibitions and in national publications. In her career thus far she has
studied everything from costuming to tattooing, and she is always on the hunt
for the next great artistic adventure. Her books have been published under
Solstice Publishing, Liquid Silver Books, and her own micro-press, Rebel Rose
Publishing, and have hit the Amazon bestseller lists multiple times.
Dani lives in San Diego with a large number of books, indie flicks, and documentaries. Her stories appeal to dreamers, troublemakers, dark romantics, horndogs, and general escapists who are tired of the same old thing in the paranormal fiction world. She is the proud owner of a lovely little son named Ryker and several beautiful tattoos. Current projects include the graphic novel version of her wildly popular paranormal adventure tale, "Black Dog and Rebel Rose", and Book II in the Psyche's Gate Saga.
This is where you can find Danielle:Site
BlogDani lives in San Diego with a large number of books, indie flicks, and documentaries. Her stories appeal to dreamers, troublemakers, dark romantics, horndogs, and general escapists who are tired of the same old thing in the paranormal fiction world. She is the proud owner of a lovely little son named Ryker and several beautiful tattoos. Current projects include the graphic novel version of her wildly popular paranormal adventure tale, "Black Dog and Rebel Rose", and Book II in the Psyche's Gate Saga.
This is where you can find Danielle:Site
Goodreads
Excerpt:
The
ice holds many secrets.
Dolph
knew this well, remembered it well as he stood in his doorway, watching the snow
tumble, glittering, from the winter-black sky outside his house. Six months of
almost no sun—darkness ruled the far Northern lands this time of year,
enveloping both icy countryside and glittering cityscape, and dark things
dwelled in winter’s frigid grip. Snowflakes tumbled and whirled downward in a
silent death’s dance, catching in Dolph’s hair as he watched the shiny jet black
snowmobile come up the candle spruce and birch-lined
road.
Snow
sputtered and flew, glittering, as the machine glided smoothly up to the simple
red-stained log house that Dolph had built a year and a half ago when he had
chosen to move from the bustle of Stockholm to the remote tundra and woodland of
Jokkmokk, near the Arctic Circle in the far north of his country. Two riders,
clothed in black snowsuits and glossy black helmets, sat astride the
snowmobile’s saddle. The driver stood up and dismounted, lifting his helmet off.
An incredibly pale young man, his white-blond hair stabbing at the eternal night
sky in high chunky spikes, his green eyes glinting impishly as he strode toward
Dolph. The older man grinned hugely, the crinkles around his eyes deepening as
he smiled.
“Äntligen
hemma,” he said in Swedish, taking the younger man’s hand and shaking it
roughly. “Home at last. Skriker…it’s been too long.”
Skriker
laughed delightedly. “Hell, yes. It’s good to see you, too, you old
wolf.”
Dolph
looked beyond Skriker and at the other rider, who had dismounted and was walking
slowly toward them. “You bring a friend with you?” he asked, smiling and
winking.
Skriker
grinned bigger than Dolph had ever seen, nodding. “Ja,” he said.
“Någon mycket speciell. Someone very special.”
He
winked roguishly, and Dolph grinned.
Dolph
watched as the other rider removed her helmet; wild raven hair blew out into the
wind, pristine snowflakes catching among the corkscrews and curls. A stunning
face, made no less comely by the scars that marked each rosy cheek; strange eyes
that evoked both fertile earth and windswept sea. The young woman nodded shyly
and put out her gloved hand. Dolph, a big man despite his age, took it gently;
as if afraid he would break her beautiful frame if he dared shake her hand too
roughly. Only later would he learn how strong she truly
was.
“Hello,
Dolph,” she said softly. “My name is Rose.” She spoke in shy, hesitant Swedish,
and it charmed the hell out of the older man. Dolph grinned
hugely.
“You
are both welcome,” he said in English. “It has been a long time since I saw my
young friend here, in his mother’s homeland, especially during this time of
year. I see that he has much to tell me. Come in, and bring your
belongings.”
Rose
followed him into the house as Skriker pulled their packs from the back of the
snowmobile, stamping the snow from her boots and removing them. A crackling fire
blazed in the big stone hearth, keeping the frigid cold at bay. The furnishings
were streamlined and minimalist, much in the Scandinavian tradition: rugs of
thick ivory sheepskin lined the polished wooden floors, and the house had been
decorated merrily for the encroaching holiday. The walls were hung with
brilliantly colored red, blue, green, and yellow weavings of the Sámi, the
ancient native reindeer herders whom Dolph had chosen to spend his twilight
years amongst, as well as the white, silvery grey, and grey-brown skins of
reindeer harvested by his indigenous neighbors. The Christmas tree standing
smartly in a windowed corner of the room filled the space with the spicy scent
of pine. It was decorated merrily with what Scandinavian custom called for:
brightly colored paper crafts, ribbons, straw Julbockgoats and ornaments,
candles, and white lights that twinkled like stars among the branches. Many of
the frost-tinted windows were decorated with candles and white hyacinths, and an
electric star lantern hung in the window nearest the front door. Dolph directed
her to a guest bedroom that had been prepared just for them; here she removed
her snowsuit and aired out the dark blue knit sweater and black trousers she
wore beneath it. Skriker came tramping in just as she emerged from the room,
stamping the snow from his boots. He dumped their two packs by the door and
removed his boots, sticking them neatly next to Rose’s before peeling his
snowsuit off right there in the doorway. He shook his head like a dog,
playfully, the snowflakes tumbling from his pale hair to melt upon the floor.
Dolph laughed as he came striding in from his kitchen, carrying a bottle of
vodka and three glasses.
“They
still call you the Black Dog over there?” he asked as he sat down on the smart,
contemporary sofa in front of the hearth, placing the liquor on the small coffee
table. Rose moseyed over and sat down on a white padded chair just opposite the
sofa, accepting her glass of vodka with a nod. Skriker shrugged as he strolled
to the sofa and seated himself next to Dolph. The two men raised their
glasses. “Skål,” the chimed together before sipping the clear
liquor.
“Yep,
and no better name for me,” Skriker said. “Still fighting, still hunting. Just
like I always did.”
Dolph
grinned and looked to Rose, his glacier-blue eyes thoughtful. “No, not the
same,” he said. “That is obvious.”
Rose
blushed, smiling shyly as she sipped her drink.
“My
girlfriend,” Skriker said. “We met on a hunt, and that was it—lightning struck.
Rosie’s the best hunter I’ve ever met. She can beat even me any day. I’m glad I
finally got to bring her along on a hunt in the old
Motherland.”
Dolph
nodded to Rose. “Indeed. So, you hunt the Darkness?”
Rose
shrugged. “I’m known to now and then.”
Skriker
snorted. “Modest, my dear.”
Dolph
chuckled and poured himself more vodka. “Good. I will need all the help I can
get with the problems I have had here. I cannot thank you enough for coming…I
know the journey was long. It has been unseasonably cold this year; the snow
came early, even for a place this far north. I wanted to bring the best.
Skriker, your man, is the best that I know. When I hunted, long ago, I had never
seen a man to match him. You honor me, coming here.”
Dolph
rose stiffly—he was, after all, almost sixty five, and the winter was colder and
crueler every year on his aging bones—and strode up to the fire. The blazing
hearth cast flickering orange light over him, turning his lined face to a
ghoulish mask as he stared into the twisting flames. His long white hair
shimmered like snow on his shoulders.
“I
bought this land and built this house so that I could retire in peace and
quiet,” he said softly. “Hunting in Stockholm was becoming weary work—I am
merely human, after all, and my years grow shorter with each season’s turn.
Chasing vampyres, dark faeries, elves, and trolls in and around the city was
becoming too much; urban life was too much. I thought to be here would mean
solitude and relaxation, a return to my youth—”
“Lagom,” Skriker
said softly. Dolph chuckled, and his smile broke up some of the flickering
orange-and-black mask that his face had become.
“Ja,
lagom,” he
said quietly. “Just enough. Nothing extreme…I have had enough of extremes to
last me a hundred lifetimes. I came here, to Jokkmokk, to enjoy solitude and
simplicity. Reading, drinking coffee, enjoying the hearth. Walking among the
Sámi and their reindeer,leaning[EF1] from
them. No hunts, no dark things coming from the long winter
nights.”
“You
know better than that, Dolph,” Rose said quietly, her half-drunk vodka glass
warming between her long hands. “You were a hunter. You saw too much to ever
believe that there is peace in any long night, even when you seek to forget
what’s out there.”
Dolph
shook his head doggedly and downed the rest of his drink. He came back to the
sofa and sat down beside Skriker, filling the younger man’s glass again, and
then his own.
“It
is my humble belief, lovely Rose, that there is still a peaceful night to be
had. I remember many from my childhood, and some from my adulthood, before the
night that I lost my wife.”
Rose
leaned forward, her dark brows furrowing, her expression pained. “My God,
Dolph…how terrible! How—”
Dolph
raised a hand to silence her, not unkindly. “A story for another journey, when
you return someday. What I have here now, haunting this land surrounding my new
house…that is what we should discuss. Past is past.”
Rose
averted her eyes and sipped her vodka.
“So
what’s the story, Dolph?” Skriker asked. “You told me on the phone that it was
in the house itself…you think you have a ghost on your
hands?”
Dolph
nodded. “Ja.ice into this house. Cold,
deep and biting, unlike any I have ever known…I have tried to warm the house
despite it, make it more cheerful. I even put up my tree quite early this year,
if only to raise my own spirits.”
He
turned his pale icy eyes to Skriker, and his aged mouth was a thin trembling
line.
“People
have died, out on the tundra,” he said quietly. “Only a month ago...they found
one of the herders, dead among the reindeer. His body had been torn to shreds,
as if by a huge and powerful beast. Blood frozen into the very earth. I feel in
my bones that these acts of terrible violence against my neighbors are the
result of what is haunting this property and the land surrounding
it.”
Skriker
was staring into the fire, his thick pale brows deeply furrowed; the look on his
face was disturbingly pensive as he listened to the old Swede’s words. Rose
leaned forward, setting her glass on the table as she stared at her companion,
her face suffused with concern.
“Skrike,
honey, what is it?”
Skriker
shook his head slowly, his mouth a knife slash as he stared into the fire. Dolph
set his hand on the younger man’s shoulder.
“Nothing…yet.
Let me mull over this tonight and I’ll have some idea of what we’re looking
at.”
Dolph
lifted his glass one last time and tipped the remaining vodka down his throat.
He harrumphed hoarsely, as old men do, and dug into a pocket of his sweater,
pulling out a pack of cigarettes. He offered it around; Skriker accepted, Rose
did not. She gazed at Skriker for a long tense moment before rising to her feet
and nodding to their host.
“I’m
going to turn in. Thank you for your hospitality, Dolph. I look forward to
speaking with you more in the morning.”
Dolph
nodded as he lit his cigarette. “I only wish I could offer you more, Rose. Have
a pleasant night.”
Skriker
was still staring into the fire when Rose vanished into the guest room at the
back of the house, his jade eyes narrow. He plugged the cigarette Dolph had
offered into the corner of his mouth and lit up demon style, inhaling the
acerbic smoke with deep pleasure. Dolph glanced at him, pinching his own fag
between his long, lined fingers and gesturing toward where Rose had been sitting
only a few moments before.
“She
isn’t human, is she?” he asked quietly. Skriker
shrugged.
“She’s
half human.”
“And
what? Half demon, like you?”
“Oh,
no. You wouldn’t believe me if I told you.”
Dolph
grinned, his pale, intense eyes twinkling, the deep lines around them crinkling
in amusement.
“How
many hunts did we go on when you were in Stockholm? And you still think that I
would not believe your words, my fine young friend.”
Skriker
laughed softly. “Fine. What would you think if I told you that you had a Nephil
under your roof tonight?”
Dolph
snorted. “I’d say you were crazy, Halfling. They don’t exist, and if they did,
God did away with them millennia ago.”
Skriker
glanced at the older man, his jade eyes glittering in the firelight. “You do
have a Nephil under your roof.”
He
jerked his head in the direction of the guest room.
“Her.”
Dolph
slowly looked back into the fire, slipping his cigarette between his lips; his
hand trembled slightly as he did. He smoked silently for a few moments, his
watery blue eyes unblinking. Finally he said, “Does she frighten
you?”
Skriker
shrugged. “Sometimes. What scares me more is the thought of losing her... she’s
everything to me. You should have seen her that first night I ran with her,
Dolph…the female equivalent of the most beautiful, finely-honed blade you could
imagine. The first time I laid eyes on her, it was like fireworks went off, and
it wasn’t just my willy talking.”
Dolph
chuckled. “That would be a change.”
Skriker
grinned, shooting a playful wink. “Tell me about it, old
wolf.”
“She’s
done you good, then?”
Skriker
nodded. “She’s made me a better man…she’s made me care more. Made me a hell of a
lot less selfish. I have a lot to thank her for.”
“Does
she have any abilities?”
Skriker’s
eyes took on a distant look. Outside, the wind mumbled about the walls and
rattled at the latch. A knot of wood on the fire popped like a small gunshot,
sending sparks swirling wildly up the chimney, so many bright embers eager to
die out in the bitter night.
“Oh,
yes. Her father gave her gifts like I’ve never seen…I have demon fire in me, but
her fire is the Heavenly type…this white blazing glory that the paintings
hanging in the Vatican can’t come close to touching. She can talk to animals,
seek out spirits…she can exorcise with a touch. She can speak
telepathically…she’ll probably be able to spot what you have here more easily
than me. That’s part of what makes her such a great hunter—these abilities. A
shifter stole her away once while we were on a hunt in New Mexico, and he only
kept her as long as he did because he could put her under a sleeping spell. She
would have killed him if he hadn’t. She’s amazing, Dolph. She’s gonna be the one
that can uncover what’s been bugging you here, using those very
gifts.”
Dolph
poured himself another half glass of vodka and took a long swig, his throat
clicking as he swallowed.
“I
am sixty five years old, and I discover new things every day,” he muttered. “I
never imagined I would ever see anything born of Heaven, from the highest
branches of the great ash…this earth is ruled primarily by the darker spheres,
that which is contained at its roots. Meeting Rose gives me hope. To meet an
angel, especially during such a sacred time…I welcome this as a
gift.”
He
downed the rest of his vodka and set the empty glass down on the coffee table
before rising stiffly to his feet.
“I
will bid you a good night, Skriker, and pray that the darkness remains outside
long enough for you to rest at least one night after your long journey. Of
course, as you will recall, the night is almost eternal here this time of
year.”
Skriker
grinned and flicked a salute and shook the old man’s hand. “I remember very well
indeed. Sleep well, old wolf.”
He
sat up for a while after Dolph had retreated to his room, smoking another
cigarette as he watched the fire dance and flicker in the stone hearth, his
sharp ears tuned to every gust of wind that sighed its way around the eaves of
the house. When he was heading back to the guest room to join Rose, he paused
for the barest moment, certain that he heard a doleful, wailing cry echo across
the frozen snowbound wastes outside his old friend’s
door.
A
cry that was there and then gone, torn away on the freezing wind like a slip of
paper.
Rose
was lying awake when he came into the guest bedroom. She had bathed while he and
Dolph sat up talking, and now was nestled in the big platform bed, snuggled deep
beneath the quilts and thick blankets, gazing at him with those strange, lovely
eyes. He glanced at the bedside table, took quick note of the wicked-looking
iron knife placed there.
Already
taking precautions, eh, Rosie? That’s my girl…
“What
happened, Skrike?”
Skriker
peeled off his sweater and then the t-shirt he had been wearing beneath that and
crouched shirtless before the small bedroom hearth, stoking a fire that danced
and crackled merrily, throwing its bright orange glow across the thick
rustic
walls.
“What
happened with what?” he asked.
“Dolph’s
wife.”
Skriker
was silent for a moment, chewing his lip as he placed another chunk of wood onto
the fire. Sap sizzled and sparks danced their swirling way up the chimney and
out into the frosty night.
“Remember
New Mexico? How that shifter stole you away?”
“Of
course. How could I forget?”
Skriker
nodded brusquely. “Yeah. She was…well, a special girl. I’m sure he’ll tell you
about it sometime. From what he’s told me, the Scandinavian equivalent of the
Fey took her. They have ruled the forests and wastes in this country since time
immemorial, and if you piss them off, you pay. You know how faeries and elf folk
are. Not too far removed from the demonic kind…tricksters and all. He pissed
them off, they took her…and he never got her back.”
“That’s
terrible…just terrible…Jesus…”
He
tossed a last block of wood onto the fire and stood up, turning to her. She sat
there gazing at him, her face forlorn at his words. His mouth twisted, his green
eyes taking on a wistful look.
“Look,”
he said softly, “I know that all you wanted a little downtime with me this
Christmas. No hunts, no blood, no bullshit. And me bringing you all the way up
here was one hell of a journey. But I’m so glad you’re here with me, baby. This
place—”
He
raised his arms, as if gesturing toward the frozen tundra and forests that
surrounded the house, his tight tattooed skin shimmering faintly in the
firelight.
“—this land…holds
more magic for me than I could ever explain. This is where my human side was
born. And having you set foot on Swedish soil with me…I think my mom would have
been thrilled, Rosie.”
Rose
just gazed at him silently, her strange eyes gleaming in the soft yellow
firelight, and the melancholy in her face made his heart ache. He offered an
impish grin and reached down, unbuttoning his
trousers.
“Hey,”
he said. “You know how to keep warm on a cold Swedish night, right,
Rosie?”
My Review:
This was quite an interesting short!! First you have Striker, who is a half demon/half human hunter. He is foul-mouthed, over-confident, and sexy as hell. Then you have Rose, his girlfriend, you is a Nephil..lol. Now that is a unique and explosive pairing!! Striker has answered the call for help from an old friend from his home town. Dolph was a retired hunter himself with an amazingly sad story. Dolph had retired from hunting and planned to enjoy his retirement quietly, reading and spending peaceful nights alone at home. But a presence has made itself known to Dolph and his surrounding neighbors. Dolph is stumped and would very much like it to go away. So he calls Striker in and together they puzzle out the entity and decide on the best plan of action. I won't spoil the details of this adventure for you, just be warned its heart-wrenching. I can totally understand Rose's hesitancy to start this hunt. There are so many cruel things that were done in the past and to actually think this was a common practice breaks my heart. I enjoyed this brief dip into this author's work and would love to read another piece. It was very well written and extremely original!!
Danielle has kindly offered up 2 copies of this book along with a swag pack!! Just fill out the rafflecopter and Good Luck!!
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17 comments:
I think recently, it would be Supernaturally Kissed by Stacey Kennedy.
The summoning series by Armstrong
I think my favorite book about a ghost would actually be a series of 4 books by Mickee Madden from the mid 1990's. Everlastin' and the 3 sequels were very touching and as you can see, quite memorable.
Definately Dark Needs at Nights Edge by Kresley Cole
I really liked Destined for an Early Grave By Jeaniene Frost
A Ghost of a Chance by Minnette Meador is a great book! :)
The Best Book I Read With a Ghost Is Dark Needs At Nights Edge Is Defiantly A Great Book.
Immortals after dark series, & The Next thing I knew By John Corwin
Off the top of my head I am actually thinking about a series. Ghost Hunter Mystery series by Victoria Laurie. Book one is What's a Ghoul to Do?... A MUST read!
I really enjoyed Destined For an Early Grave by Jeaniene Frost and the rest of the books in the series that have different ghosts in them.
A story in Wattpad titled The Lost Boys.
The Morganville Vampires by Rachel Caine
The Morganville Vampires by Rachel Caine
The Morganville Vampires by Rachel Caine is the only book I've really read involving a ghost.
I'm definitely wanting to read more though!
The one that stands out is Destined for an Early Grave By Jeaniene Frost.
Thanks for this giveaway!
redfirewood888(AT)yahoo(DOT)ca
Ollie aka DarkBloodyVamp
GRAVE WITCH by kalayna price...
thx u so much :)
chikojubilee at gmail dot com
A Christmas Carol by author Charles Dickens.
Thank you for the giveaway!
Artemis
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