

Beschreibung
Lies, beauty, and seduction mingle in the first book of an enthralling romantasy series where making art is considered a sin, and the shadows born from it aren''t the only danger to the creators--from the bestselling author of Ever since art gave life to blood...Lies, beauty, and seduction mingle in the first book of an enthralling romantasy series where making art is considered a sin, and the shadows born from it aren''t the only danger to the creators--from the bestselling author of Ever since art gave life to bloodthirsty shadows, creative works have been forbidden and the talented creators sacrificed to the Sinless--the immortal royals who feast on human blood in return for their protection. Inana’s secret storytelling nearly got her killed once, and she’ll be damned if she’s ever caught again. With a bounty on her head, she keeps to the city’s dark underbelly where she earns a meager living from thrill-seeking patrons desperate to hear her illicit fiction. Until Dominic, a Shadowbane, catches one of her performances. . . Dominic is a half-Sinless monster hunter as fearsome as his prey. But to complete his hunt, he needs an artist to summon the shadows . . . he needs Inana. Dominic delivers an ultimatum: serve him or he’ll claim her bounty. When survival is all Inana has left, the choice is clear. At least until she can betray him and leave him for dead. As their tense alliance leads them into the heart of danger, dark secrets unravel--about each other, their world, and the threats they face. But the greatest risk of all is the desire growing between them. There’s something more sinful than lust at play, and it could bring the world to its knees.
Autorentext
Tessonja Odette is a Seattle-based author of fantasy romance, epic romantasy, and fairytale retellings. Her different series range from cozy fae romcoms to dark and twisty fantasy. In her books you’ll find witty banter, sizzling romance, and breathtaking magic. When she isn’t writing, she’s watching anime, squeezing her pets, or dancing to the music only she can hear.
Leseprobe
Chapter One
Inana
The first time I whispered a story to the wind, it was with the certainty that it would end in my death. I may have been a child then, but I understood the implications of the crime I was committing. To perform art is to lie, to lie is to sin, and to sin is to attract the shadows that haunt the dark. Still, instead of running from what I’d done, I waited with bated breath, safe in the sunlight, while my eyes were locked on the woods at the edge of my village. I hardly dared blink for fear I’d miss the telltale sign of movement darkening between the trees. Some indication that I’d stirred a shadow monster’s hunger.
When an hour passed and no such danger presented itself, I wasn’t relieved.
I was disappointed.
Not because I wanted to die; I wanted to feel alive. To quell the longing inside me, instilled not by sin but by holy scripture.
There is no lie greater than fiction,
No sin more beautiful than art.
Stray not unto these pleasures,
For the devil is their muse.
Gods, the way those lines moved me back then. Though they were meant to serve as a warning not to partake in the forbidden arts, they never sounded like one to me. They sounded like a calling. A challenge. Could I weave a tale so fascinating the devil would take notice? One so beautiful the Shades that plague humanity would seek my death?
That wasn’t the last time I breathed fiction into the world. It was only the beginning, and eventually storytelling spelled my doom. Twice I was caught for my crimes.
The first time, it cost me the man I loved.
The second time, my freedom.
Yet it’s funny how captivity is the place I’ve felt most free. On nights like tonight, at least.
A windowless room beckons me from up ahead. I keep my breathing steady as my companions and I proceed down the dim corridor toward it. We’re silent save for the soft padding of our slippered feet, the air between us buzzing with a palpable blend of terror and anticipation. We know what awaits us, for none of us are new to performing at the Wretched Lair.
There are more than a dozen of us tonight, all of us artists and outlaws. At age twenty-six, I am neither the youngest nor the oldest. My colleagues range from a girl in her teens to a man twice my years. Most, like me, are indentured to Mr. Rockefeller, the well-dressed gentleman who leads our entourage. The rest have already earned out their contracts and are here by choice to make a living. In two years I’ll be among them. Another year after that and I’ll have earned enough to buy safe passage off this f***ing continent.
I just have to survive until then.
A shiver crawls up my spine as the first strain of music reaches my ears, a lilting melody plucked on some stringed instrument. Such a chilling sound when all forms of imaginative art are forbidden. I should be used to it by now. After one year in Mr. Rockefeller’s custody, one year of performances at the Wretched Lair, I’ve heard my share of music. Yet I don’t think it will ever sound less haunting. Less enchanting.
The closer we draw to the doorway, the louder the melody grows, as do bursts of laughter and chatter. I brace myself for the sharp scent of liquor that floods my nostrils, hoping I don’t smell the iron tang of blood along with it. If there are any Sinless in attendance tonight . . .
I swallow the ball of fear that rises in my throat. Mr. Rockefeller may hold enough sway over his fellow aristocrats to keep us safe from them, but he cannot promise the same with the Sinless.
At least all of us are masked, our identities further obscured by identical garb: silk robes in deep scarlet with ribbon closures from waist to neck and matching veils over the backs of our heads. No one will see my red-blond hair or freckled cheeks. They’ll hardly notice my gray irises through the eye slits. All they’ll see are the different designs on our masks—the only things that set us apart, save for our varying heights and builds. My mask is embellished with an elegant floral filigree and a halo of narrow spikes that resemble sunbeams, all of which trail bronze beads that rustle and sway with my movements.
We cross the threshold at last, the transition from the dark corridor to the brightly lit room temporarily blinding me. I blink to adjust to the glow of the glittering crystal chandeliers suspended overhead, their golden light made even more brilliant by the gleam reflected off the silver walls, floor, and ceiling. It’s bright enough to send a throbbing ache to my temples, though I should be grateful. Silver and light are the two things that ward off Shades—shadow monsters that manifest from human sin.
That was the original purpose of this room, to serve as an underground emergency bunker. Sacred Cities like Nalheim are surrounded by towering silver walls as well as a dome of light cast by a Holy Brazier at the city’s center. Bunkers like this one provide a haven for the aristocracy to flee to should Nalheim’s primary protections be compromised. Yet instead of reserving his sanctuary for such a cataclysmic event, Mr. Rockefeller turned it into a social club for the upstanding city elite. A place to safely give his peers a taste of sin.
Rockefeller leads us to the center of the party, where we fan out to allow our audience a full view of tonight’s entertainment. Despite the lack of windows, the room is what I imagine a parlor in a palace would look like, with velvet-upholstered wingback chairs and tables laden with decadent food. The silver walls are etched in a damask pattern, the silver ceiling is coffered, and the silver floors are polished to a shine. Such an extravagant display of the continent’s most coveted metal.
A few sets of eyes dart our way, but most of our patrons are still engaged in conversation or deep in their drinks as they sprawl about on the furniture. They’re dre…
