Blog Tour~ Bear With Me by Jennifer Blackstream
Title: Bear With Me
Series: The Blood Realm Series #4
By: Jennifer Blackstream
Publication Date: April 4, 2017
Publisher: Skeleton Key Publishing
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Cover Designer: YOCLA Designs
#bearwithmetour
A PRINCE TRAPPED IN THE BODY OF A BEAR
Torben is a bear shifter struggling to pass a test laid on him by his power-hungry stepmother. Bound into his beast form during the day, able to be human only at night when the darkness hides him, he must find a wife. She can know him only as a bear and a bodiless voice in the night. For one year, she must let him keep his secrets, trust him as a wife should trust her husband. But what woman will climb into bed with a bear and trust it is a man waiting for her?
A BARD LOOKING FOR HER VOICE
After witnessing her mother's murder left her blind, Leta had to put away her sword and her dreams of becoming a bard. Now she is resigned to a calm life where the best she can hope for is a good marriage that will take the burden of her care from her father's shoulders. When her father claims the gods have sent a man to be not just her husband, but perhaps her savior, Leta has to take a leap of faith...and hope she falls in love.
Even a blind woman can see when something is worth fighting for...
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The Blood Realm Series #3
Amazon - http://amzn.to/2rxxpsi
Amazon - http://amzn.to/2qz1UJk
The Blood Rose Series #1
Amazon - http://amzn.to/2seoF6i
It was on the tip of Letaās tongue to argue, to tell her father what he could do with his suitor who thought he could fix the poor little blind girl. But she bit it back. This was what theyād hoped for, what theyād thought would be impossible. This was no time for her battered pride to make a stand.
āIāll meet with him.ā She took a deep breath and straightened her spine. āPerhaps you could invite him to dinner this week?ā
Her father cleared his throat. āHeās here. Now.ā
She slumped, hands going limp in her lap. āWhat? What do you mean heās here now?ā
āHeās hereā¦for you.ā
āHeāsā¦ā Her voice was a pathetic squeak, and now it was her turn to clear her throat. āFatherā¦are you telling me youāve already given him my hand?ā
āI signed the marriage contract five minutes ago.ā
His voice was a whisper, so quiet she might not have heard it two months ago, before sheād lost her vision, when her other senses had not been quite so keen. She swayed and put a hand on the floor to steady herself. Sheād agreed to an arranged marriage, had given him her blessing to find her a suitor. Butā¦
āI donāt understand. Why so quickly?ā
āLeta, itās been two months. Iād hoped you would come through this on your own. I prayed you would come through this on your own. But you havenāt. I donāt know how to help you. Iā¦ā His voice broke and he groped for her hands, took them in his trembling fingers. āLeta, you need someone who will make you feel safe, who might be able to bring you throughāā
āAnd what if there is no through this? What if this is who I am now, what I am now?ā Her muscles tingled with the urge to stand, to stalk away from him, storm off in a healthy fit of justified indignation. āYou couldnāt let me have any dignity? Couldnāt let me go into this arranged marriage like any other woman? You had to send me off to be fixed, as though I were a table with a wobbly leg?ā
Experience kept her kneeling on the floor. If she tried to fly off in a rage, she would succeed only in humiliating herself. High emotions flustered her, made it harder to remember where all the furniture was, how far the wall was. A broken nose or bruised shins wouldnāt help anyone, and it certainly wouldnāt do her wounded pride any good. And so she sat there, a prisoner. Locked in a dark world.
āWell then,ā she said, her voice tight, āI suppose Iād better go meet the man who will be my nursemaid from now on.ā
āLetaāā
āAre you going to escort me out, or would you like me to feel my way there, give him a good idea of what heās getting himself into?ā
āLeta, pleaseāā
āVery well.ā She was being childish now, but she didnāt care. She surged to her feet and stuck her arms out in front of her, swinging them side to side as she took small steps toward where she thought the doorway was. Her nerves screamed with heightened awareness, bracing to be struck by something, as if the room were suddenly full of stalactites. Ignoring her fatherās protests, she shuffled forward, feeling in front of her with the toes of each foot and the tips of her fingers.
Her father tried to take her arm when she reached the door, but she shrugged him off. Composing herself as best she could, she groped along the wall of the hallway, inching closer and closer to the main room of the house. She was grateful there were no stairs, and she was able to make it to the sitting room attached to the foyer without falling or striking anything.
It was hard to describe how she knew someone was in the room, even though she couldnāt see. Something about the hairs on the back of her neck, a tingle down her spine that screamed at her she was being watched. She always knew when someone else was in the room with her, but this time there was something more. A thrill that brushed her fight-or-flight reflex, filled her with a strange, warbling anxiety. Someone was watching her. Someoneā¦big.
Donāt be ridiculous. You canāt possibly feel size, her mind chastised her. Still, her senses stubbornly refused to admit any doubt. Whoever was watching her had a weight to his presence, and she could feel it. She blinked and moved her eyes around, trying to see something, anything, a slice of shadow or light that would give her a clue. But the darkness remained as thick as it always was, silent and impenetrable.
A strange scent wafted past her nose. Musk and the crisp scent of the wind off the mountains to the north. The faintest hint of sea air. The floor creaked as someone shifted their weight. Her heart skipped a beat and her instincts crowed in vindication. There was definite weight to that sound.
If that was her husband, he was not a small man.
āAre you really going to let the blind woman stand here wondering if sheās alone in the room?ā
āYou seem very aware that you are not alone.ā
The voice was masculine, and so deep that it vibrated things low in her body, quickened the pulse in her neck. She angled her ear toward that voice, forming a mental picture of the room and her visitorās location based on where his voice had come from. It was lower than sheād expected, as though he were sitting down.
āLeta, this is Torben Biorna. Torben, this is my daughter Leta.ā
āI understand Iām your wife now.ā
She threw the words down like a gauntlet, using her tone to make it clear what she thought of such things being settled without her presence, let alone input. The floor creaked again, and somewhere underneath that was a different sound that she wasnāt familiar with. Something hard sliding against the wood. It was brief, too brief for her to consider it closely. She frowned and tilted her head a little more, waiting to hear if it would happen again.
āYes, you are my wife.ā
Again his voice did strange and wonderful things to her body, teasing sensations from her with that hint of promise, that faint brush of heat. Warmth washed over her cheeks, and she was horrified to realize she was blushing.
If he noticed her embarrassing reaction, he kept it from his voice. āThings progressed quickly, and I donāt blame you for being displeased at your lack of participation. It is not how I would have liked to begin our relationship, but I hope youāll give me a chance to make it up to you.ā
She groped for her temper, needing it to bolster her defenses against that voice. āMy father says you think you can fix me.ā
āLeta,ā her father warned.
āNo, itās all right. I would be offended too, were I in her place.ā
Another creak of the floorboards, followed by that same sound. Leta leaned forward, and it stopped immediately.
āYou do not need to be fixed, Leta. You are not broken.ā
Her father had spoken those same words to her, more times than she could count. But they were different coming from this man. He spoke with a definite authority, an unwavering confidence that said he knew he was right. It touched something inside her, something frightened. A tiny knot of tension she hadnāt been aware of relaxed.
āTorben was a solider.ā Her fatherās voice was gentle now, encouraging. āHeās known a lot of men who had very strong reactions after witnessing horrible things. Heās helped them.ā
āYour father told me what happened to your mother,ā Torben said quietly. āIām sorry for your loss.ā
Echoes of her motherās screams filled Letaās ears. Her chest rose and fell more rapidly, her breaths sharper, painful. Ice water trickled through her veins, chasing away the warm feeling Torben had summoned with his words, his voice. The knot of tension returned, trailing a string of others until she stood hunched in on herself, falling into an all-too-familiar nightmare.
āI donāt want to talk about it.ā Her voice was weak, strangled by the memory peeking out at her like a monster from the mouth of a cave. She held her hands out, feeling around herself for orientation.
āLeta, here, come sit down.ā
Her father took her arm, and she wilted with relief and let him lead her to a chair. Sitting calmed her, took away the awful feeling of disorientation that struck her when her emotions overwhelmed her spatial sense. She fought her way out of the panic, tried to reorient herself, remember where her husband was.
āWe donāt have to talk about it.ā He spoke as if heād sensed her discomfort, her need to know where he was. āKnow only that I am here to listen if you change your mind.ā
She bobbed her head, grateful for his willingness to let it go. āYouāre going to stay with us for a while, then?ā
Awkward silence billowed into the room like dense fog.
āLetaā¦heās your husband.ā Her father shifted on his chair, his discomfort announced by every squeak of the wood. āYouāre leaving with him.ā
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Website - http://www.jenniferblackstream.com/
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