I’m tickled to present Tina Glasneck and her book, A Dragon’s Desire
A Dragon’s Desire: Blurb
When
you make plans, the gods laugh. All decisions come with
consequences.
In this second book of the Dragons series, time travel and fantasy weave together in a fantastical romance.
Although Jaz is a dragon, the fact that the paranormal exists hasn’t made life any easier. The Norse gods are a little too active in her life, and her lover, Erich, the necromancer, a Viking and demigod, is acting distant. His going from extremely hot to cold has her second guessing everything, and wondering if his proclamation of love was just simple manipulation, and if their relationship has lost its like new car smell.
When trouble comes, it comes in heaps, and right at Jaz’s feet. This trouble happens to send her back to 1799 to Étretat, France. The political upheaval combined with Napoleon’s forces and the threat of the Reign of Terror leaves her wondering who she can trust — one wrong move and she’ll lose more than her dragon head.
A Dragon’s
Desire Excerpt:
Relationships are built not only on the love that the couple has for
one another but also on their shared experiences. In 1520, while back
in time learning about the great Black Knight, I’d also learned a
lot about my handsome man. Staring at his profile now, his dark brown
hair no longer flowed as it had, but his austere appearance did not
mar the attractiveness of his strong features. A neatly trimmed beard
rested along a strong jaw and if I told a joke or two, I was sure I
could get those gray eyes to turn silver. I loved him, and he kept my
heart safe. I’d do whatever it took to keep those seeds of love
alive.
His eyes grazed over my body, and in one nanosecond, all the magic
I’d been storing up formed into a tight, bright orange ball and
then exploded around us.
“What did you do?” Tink asked.
Her question made me stop giving Erich my come-hither stare. Would I
be a bad friend if I admitted that I wanted to kick out Tink, his
non-blood relation who he called sister on this earthly plane, so
that I could explore where his hot gaze might lead?
Tink snapped her fingers before my eyes.
“Jaz,” she screamed. “What did you do?” She backed up until
the kitchen table jammed into her side.
It was then I noticed the army of fire ants that paraded down the
wall and marched toward her. Climbing on top of each other, they
quickly formed a three-dimensional shape resembling a moving wave.
“Make it stop!” she said.
I had no idea how to make fire ants obey me. Hell, I didn’t even
know I could conjure them up. Like a madwoman, I gathered pots and
pans and began to scoop them up, while saying every Latin word I
could think of. “Sic semper tyrannis,” I said, as if the motto of the Virginian flag might help.
Instead the ants continued to pile on top of one another. Tink scampered away, and still they came.
She followed my lead and started to bang together pots and pans to knock them away.
“Say something to stop this,” I said.
Tink waved her hands. Nothing happened. “I can’t. You’re magical. Your magic is not like anything I’ve ever handled. You have to learn how to hone in and control it.”
“Brutum fulme” I then shouted, as if calling forth
senseless lightning would cause a bolt to come through and fry the
pesky things. Still nothing happened.
“I’m so not qualified for this,” I screamed. Frustration caused
a tingling in my fingers, which rose up my arms like I’d touched a
hotplate.
“Jaz,” Erich interjected, “concentrate.”
I closed my eyes, took a deep breath and focused on the dragon
resting just below my skin. I felt her stir, awaken. Fire grew in my
belly. My lips puckered and uttered the words the beast had whispered
to me, “Carpe
noctem.” Seize the night!
The ants stopped mid-step, frozen.
Hearing the beast, I repeated what it ordered: “Transit umbra, lux permanet.” Shadow passes, light remains. The fire ants disintegrated, leaving not even a speck of dust behind.
Tink hurried to her cauldron, which was boiling over, vomiting a cloud of what looked like pixie dust on to the counter and removed her black choker with Chakra stones. “I’ve read of many wearing talismans until they are able to get control of their powers. This will protect you. Do NOT take it off, do you hear me?”
“Sure, sure,” I nodded my head, but really, I just wanted to push her out of the door. “Thanks, Tink.”
Tink looked first at me and then at Erich.
Instead of moving towards the door, I wished for it to open, and it did.
“I guess that’s my sign to leave,” she said and quickly packed everything into her wicker basket.
“I didn’t know I could do that.”
Buy link:
Tina Glasneck Bio:
Tina Glasneck is
a writer of crime fiction and fantasy romance. Her imagination
thrives when it comes to hot coffee, great music and laughter. She
believes in miracles, the power of positive thinking, and that in
each of us a dragon lurks. Learn more about Tina on her website:
http://tglasneck.wixsite.com/tglasneck