Author Archive : Renee Wildes

When I was young I was a real tomboy. I loved braving the outdoors–caving, rock climbing, rappeling and whitewater rafting. I especially loved caving. I loved reading adventure books like "The Longest Cave" and "The Caves Beyond." My favorite class trip was a bus trip down from WI to MO with my Wilderness Challenge buddies, crawling through the mud and the dark, exploring deep underground. Setting up tents in the rain and washing clothes in a freezing cold river wasn't nearly as fun! A whole glamerous week of kneepads and coveralls, hard hats and carbide lamps, mud on your face and the smell of acetylene gas in your hair! I was definitely not a girlie girl!

So it was no surprise to family and friends when a cave setting appeared in DUST OF DREAMS, my latest fantasy romance in the Guardians of Light series. My faerie heroine Pryseis is kidnapped by goblins and dragged deep underground. My elven hero Benilo goes to rescue her.

BLURB:

All her light—and all his love—may not be enough to hold the nightmares at bay…

Guardians of Light, Book 4

Mingling with other races is strictly forbidden, but dream faerie Pryseis has no choice. An innocent goblin child suffers dangerous nightmares, and it should be a simple task to cure him and return to her anxious sisters before the council knows she’s gone.

Yet there’s a reason a creature of air and sunlight has no business underground. Now in chains, prisoner of an ungrateful goblin sorcerer, Pryseis despairs that anyone will save her. Her only comfort—the memory of a man she can only touch in her dreams.

Benilo ta Myran, with the reluctant blessing of his elven king and queen, takes up a quest some would call mad, driven by the certain knowledge that the beautiful faerie who invades his dreams is in danger. He carries a terrible secret—war has broken his healing powers—yet he cannot leave her to face the darkness alone.

The first touch of their flesh surpasses their most erotic dreams, but the nightmare has just begun. There’s the suffering child, and a sorcerer who won’t go down without a fight. And the clock is ticking down for Pryseis, who must return home—or fade away.


Product Warnings

Beware of wounded bunnies, hungry trolls, low ceilings, glowing mold and goblins bearing gifts. Most of all, beware beautiful faeries and hot elves appearing in your dreams. They may lead you astray…and steal your heart. 

I’ve always been facinated by the selkie legend. When I was trying to figure out who my heroine should be for my Guardian Trystan (from Duality), a mountain werebadger-turned-werewolf, I thought opposites attract. Land…sea. And Finora appeared. Outcast warrior prince on a mission and single mom. Both creatures of the moon, both on a personal quest. She rescues his life. He rescues her heart. But losing her heart could cost her her soul…

Giving in to the lure of passion could lead to disaster…

Guardians of Light, Book 3

Selkie princess Finora is all too familiar with betrayal. Betrayal by her curiosity, which led her from the sea. By her body, which yielded to a handsome human under the full moon. By the human, who hid her skin and took its location with him to his grave. After seven years of searching, she no longer believes in miracles.

Trystan is a werewolf on a mission to find and return dragons to his homeland. He follows a slim lead westward across an unfamiliar sea. Gravely wounded in a pirate attack, his ship foundered in a storm and sinking fast, he comes face to face with the most unexpected rescuers—Finora and her two half-human children.

Selkie and werewolf. Both creatures ruled by the moon. The attraction is instant, mutual, undeniable…and impossible. Trystan is destined to return to the mountains and Finora can’t leave the sea. Their only gift to each other is one night of searing passion—which could lead to the greatest betrayal of all…

Warning: Contains searing passion, bitter betrayal, hard choices, seven-year curses, and lost seal skins. Throw in an impending selkie war and one wicked ship-wrecking storm. Add a cranky sea-goddess, soul-stealing dragons, interfering mermaids, and children in peril.

Read on for an excerpt from Lycan Tides:

Trystan awoke to sunlight blazing through a window. He struggled to drag open salt-encrusted lids. His eyes burned as he focused on that streaming light. Not a porthole—a real window. He lay in a four-poster bed that did not swing. His mouth felt as dry as the sand from the hold of the Sunrisen. His body screamed with thirst. But his leg no longer pained him. The nauseating smell of decaying flesh was gone. He held his breath as he reached beneath the quilt and ran his hand down the back of his thigh, relieved to find intact skin over muscle. The bandage was gone. He’d shifted under the full moon and healed.

He frowned. His memory returned in splintered fragments, like shards of broken pottery. He remembered Doc trying to convince him to permit surgery afore a storm hit, then bits of the tempest itself—an insane, raging beast of screaming wind and surging waves. The Sunrisen had shattered around him on jagged rocks. Men had scrambled about in the dark, trying to save their own skins. He relived freezing water closing in around him, over him, and shivered even now. Then the miraculous appearance of a dog built like a bear, the shadow of a fish with long green hair and the sharp stones of a shoreline digging into his skin.

He recalled a woman’s dark eyes in the moonlight. He stared at the colorful design that graced the white quilt covering him, vivid interlocking circles of red and blue, and took a deep breath. A woman’s bed. His body stirred. The pillows, the sheets were ripe with her rich, musky scent. There was no scent of a man at all. Where were Niadh and Ealga?

Where was he?

The door opened and a dark-haired woman strode into the sunlit room. Her scent hit him first—day over night, clean sunshine and the sharp briny tang of sea air over warm woman. The lethal sway of her hips got the attention of parts of him he’d nigh forgotten existed on the long celibate journey westward. She carried a pitcher and a cup, and smiled. “You’re awake. How are you feeling?”

His body hardened at her sultry voice. “Thirsty.” He stared into familiar brown eyes. The soft liquid eyes of a doe. Bedroom eyes. ’Twas her—the woman from last night. He’d not been dreaming.

She poured water into the cup and handed it to him, then set the pitcher on the bedside table aside a basin. “You must have swallowed some seawater last night. Drinking lots of fresh water will help.”

“Where am I?” He frowned at the rough, rusty edge to his voice and drank.

She poured him another. “You’re in Lighthaven, in Rhattany.” She sat down aside him, on the edge of the bed. “Do you remember anything from last night?”

“Bits an’ pieces.” Lighthaven. So the Sunrisen had made it after all, afore foundering on the rocks. “How many asides me?”

“Living or dead?”

He took another sip. Fresh, cold, with the tang of minerals, a tinge of iron. Never had plain water tasted so good. “Either. Both.”

The corners of her mouth twitched. His gaze locked on those plump lips. “I went down into the village to check. We lost four of the crew and two of the rowers you rescued after the corsair attack. Captain Reed, Mick and Doc are fine.”

“What o’ Giles an’ Toby?”

“Giles survived. I’m sorry, I don’t know who—”

“The cabin boy, Toby.”

“Oh.” The woman blinked. “He’s fine. He’s resting at Madame Jasmine’s, along with the rest of the crew who don’t have families here. The girls there spoil him rotten.”

Relief eased the tightness in his back.

She leaned over to rest the satiny inside of her wrist against his brow. “You don’t have a fever. That’s good news. With that leg I feared I’d find the worst this morning. But the moon did Her part, and your black-furred companion was right. You’re a fast healer.”

Trystan frowned. She knew? She knew what he was? She communicated with Niadh? Niadh survived? He glanced over at the doorway.

A bright silver eye peeked around the door. “Glad t’ see ye this morn’, too, laddie.”

“Where’s Ealga?”

“Shreddin’ a rabbit for breakfast. She’s as sick o’ fish as the rest o’ us.”

Trystan studied the woman, for the first time catching a sense of “Other” from her, along with a deep well of sadness, of desolation, she held locked up tight. ’Twas reminiscent of Niadh’s darker moments, the feeling of a Shifter caught in a single phase and unable to escape.

“But whilst mine was imposed, a punishment, hers was stolen. ’Twas no fault o’ hers.”

She placed cool fingertips against the pulse in his neck.

He scrubbed at his eyes. Delicate but work-roughened hands stopped him.

“It’s dried salt, from seawater. You’re covered in it. Don’t rub them. You might scratch your eyes. I’ve water heating for a bath.” She poured water into the basin, wrung out the wet cloth within and placed it over his eyes. “Here, this should help for now.”

Trystan wiped the gritty crust away and twisted to put the cloth back into the basin. He relaxed against the pillow, relieved. “It does. Thanks. What’s yer name, lass?”

“Finora. Yours?”

Finora. “Trystan. Me companion out there is Niadh.”

“Where are you from? Forgive me, but you don’t sound either Rhattan or Arcadian.”

“The mountains north o’ Arcadia.”

“Long way from home, mountain man.” Finora grasped the edge of the quilt and tugged it down to his waist.

He tensed as she bent down to lay her head on his chest. Sun and moon, her hair was soft. He held very still, so stiff he ached. “What’re ye—”

“Ssh.” She reached up to rest her fingers against his lips. “I’m just listening to your heart and lungs. Now be quiet and let me listen.”

She could lie there all day if she liked. Or slide her face farther down, wrap her lips around him and ease the discomfort… Of their own volition, his fingers threaded through the sable strands. They slid over his skin like silk. He wondered where she’d slept last night.

Too soon, she rose. “Sounds good. No lingering effects from last night. Roll over.”

He frowned. How could he be so aroused and she be so oblivious? “What for?”

Finora rolled her eyes at him and fisted her hands on her hips. “Stars, you’re suspicious. I want to look at the wound.”

She was all business. Pity. “’Tis gone. There’s naught t’ see.”

“Don’t be such an old lady. Humor me.”

Mayhaps she preferred women. Now that’d be a shame. He did as she bade, felt cool air on his bare skin as the quilt was ripped away. Her hands slid down the length of his left thigh with thorough but quick efficiency afore she replaced the quilt. Trystan rolled over and captured her hand, curled his fingers around her wrist. “Naught else ye cared t’ ogle this morn’?”

She blushed. Awareness sparked in her eyes. Optimism stirred. Mayhaps she liked men after all. “Spoken like a man who’s been at sea too long,” she retorted. “For your information, I’m an old widowed mother of two and hardly a lass. You don’t have anything I’m not already well acquainted with, and if you’re looking to get ogled this morning you’re in the wrong house. Sounds like you could use Madame Jasmine’s. I’m sure they’d spoil you rotten, too.”

Trystan grimaced. “Sorra t’ disappoint ye but I dinna frequent whores.” He far preferred sexual encounters based on genuine attraction and liking to the simplicity of women who doled out their favors to all and sundry for the shine of hard coin.

But never afore had attraction flashed so immediate, so hot and fast.

I’ve always believed in fairytales and HEAs, so I’m pleased to introduce my own version of Cinderella. Dara’s a half dragon fire mage, public healer and secret warrior, who’s trying to oust a demon-possessed despot from her land. But even dragons need help with demons. Enter elven warrior-prince Loren and his war mare Hani’ena, who decides to help whether Dara wants it or not. Falling in love really can mess up the best-laid war plans…


BLURB:
Dara Khan Androcles is really in over her head this time. From childhood she’s been forced to hide her half-dragon mage fighting skills behind a public persona as a healer. Now, with a traitor and his demon threatening the throne of Safehold, Dara has no choice but to turn reluctant warrior—and seek help.

She strikes a bargain with runaway Elven prince Loren ta Cedric and his sentient, pain-in-the-butt war mare, Hani’ena. Loren’s not only too handsome for Dara’s own good, the powerful empath can see right through to the pain that drives her.

Loren can’t help but feel Dara’s every hurt, physical and emotional. Though his need for her drives him half mad, he must stay his course to see justice done for his people. Even if it means swearing a Life Debt to the distracting mortal.

That vow, made in the heat of their parallel quests, carries more power than either of them guessed. The power to bond the unlikely pair as Life Mates. The power to lay bare the fears and desires that could bind them to a single purpose—or tear them apart.

All the while a demon awaits, ready to destroy all that they hold dear.

Warning: Contains patricide; noble self-sacrifice; one bad-ass, demon-possessed despot; a bad-tempered dragon; and a water mage who likes to “rain” on her husband’s parade—literally. Downside: A quest for a magic book (written in blood) that nobody wants, and a talking war mare with the warm, fuzzy voice of Judy Densch. Upside: Serious ass-kicking. Be prepared to learn to curse, cry and laugh—in Elvish.

EXCERPT:
When much of the filth did not come off with repeated applications of soap, Loren realized with horror and pity to what extent the bruises spread. He tried to be gentle, but Dara still hissed a time or two. “Sorry.”

“It’s all right.” Her cheeks flamed as he scrubbed every available inch of bare golden skin with fern-scented soap, then rinsed her with clean water.

He kept his face impassive as he ran the rag over her full breasts. Her nipples tightened, beckoning. He forced his hand not to linger. Dara caught her breath. From the coolness of the water, or in reaction to his touch? “Turn over.” He cursed the hoarseness in his voice. He scrubbed her shoulders and back, then lower, below the binding, over the lush curve of her backside all the way down to her toes, until every inch of unbruised skin gleamed golden in the firelight.

His body clenched when she quivered at his touch. Uncertainty. Awareness. Hers, or his own wishful thinking? To distract himself, he stared, entranced, at that skin. He had expected burns in addition to bruises and abrasions, lots of burns. There were none, except from the iron bindings. The rest of her was unmarked by the flames she had stood in, but the ropes and wood had burned away. He himself was blistered and singed. There had been no time yet for trance-healing on this northward flight.

How could this be?

He rinsed the rag and ran it up betwixt her legs, dragging it through coppery curls. Heat greeted his touch, and he hardened to the point of pain.

Fear.

It was a dash of ice water. He froze and backed off. “Did he…hurt you?” Murderous rage flared at what Jalad might have done.

Dara shook her head. When she looked back at him, her eyes were wide with shock and a churning mixture of emotions. A maiden’s uncertainty warred with tentative yearning and instinctive arousal. “Nay. ’Tis just, I’ve ne’er…no man’s e’er…”

Blinding need to be her first, her only, slammed into him. “Never fear that I would hurt you.” He would die first. “Can you kneel? I can do your hair.” He helped her up and unbound her braid. Hot, dirty water cascaded over her hair. That once-glorious river of flame. He scrubbed with the soap. “This is going to be cold” was the only warning he gave her afore dumping icy clean spring water over her, carrying away the last traces of Jalad’s hospitality.

She yelped as she flung her hair back. “It feels so good to be clean again. Thank you.”

Loren helped her wring out long sections. Unbidden, an image of it wrapped around their naked, entwined bodies flashed in his mind’s eye. Silk and fire… He cursed and yanked his spare tunic over her head, grateful when it fell to her knees. “Sit by the fire. It will help dry your hair.” He shoved a wooden comb into her hand and turned away. “I go to wash the cloak so it can dry afore sleep time.” He gathered soap, rags and waterskin and fled to the spring afore she commented on the aroused state of his body that defied all his control. So much for chivalry.

Renee Wildes grew up reading fantasy authors Terry Brooks and Mercedes Lackey and is a huge Joseph Campbell fan, so the minute she discovered romance novels it became inevitable that she would combine it all and write fantasy romance. Renee is a history buff, from medieval times back to ancient Greece and Sparta. As a Navy brat and a cop’s kid, she gravitated to protector/guardian heroes and heroines. She’s had horses her whole life, so became the only vet tech in a family of nurses. It all comes together in her Guardians of Light series for Samhain – fantasy, action, romance, heroics and lots of critters!

Visit Renee at:
http://www.reneewildes1.wordpress.com
http://www.guardiansoflight.wordspress.com
Yahoo group: http://www.groups.yahoo.com/group/reneewildesromancefantastique
Website: http://www.reneewildes.net

Happy Reading!