#1 New York Times Bestselling
Author Rachel Van Dyken returns to regency romance with the last and final installment in
The London Fairy Tales series...A regency retelling of Snow White and The
Seven Dwarves.
Ashton
Wolfsbane, Earl of Gyles, has taken a vow of celibacy after blaming
himself for his sister in laws death. After a failed suicide attempt, he's
dedicated his life to bring justice to the weak making it his personal vendetta to be
the death dealer to the wicked, also known as The Grimm Reaper. He denies
himself lusts of the flesh and is known throughout London because of his ability
to kill
effortlessly and without emotion, that is until he meets
Princess Sofia, a woman hell bent on making him forget all his reasons for
denying himself the one thing he's always craved---love.
After
rescuing the fair damsel, he thinks his job finished, that is until he
discovers he's to be the Princess's escort throughout London until she's safely
married. It wouldn't
be such a hardship, except the Princess has made him an
offer he can't refuse. Show her passion, real passion.
Four weeks
of giving into the desire he's suppressed for so long--four
weeks of bliss and then they'll go their separate ways. But things aren't
always what they seem, and when rescuing a damsel, or making a deal with her, one
must always be prepared for the consequences.
Seven Royal
Guard, a Beast, a kingdom in chaos, and a girl as pure as the
driven snow...Will they find their Happily Ever
After?
PROLOGUE
Ash didn’t want to remember her this
way. Her beautiful face, so often lit with a breathtaking smile, was now cold
and dead.
The first time he’d seen her, he had thought
she was an angel, and he’d said that very thing under his breath when she had
made her debut that season…
“Beautiful,” he murmured as Lucy took
a turn about the room, gaining introductions to all the available gentlemen who
came her way. Taking an earth-shattering breath, the kind that every man took
when he was about to approach a beautiful woman, he made his way over to
her.
Music faded into the background with
each step. All Ash was aware of was the clicking of his boot against the floor
as he progressed toward the beauty. One dance… if only she would give him one
dance, he would secure her hand forever. He knew it in his heart, in his soul.
She was meant to be his.
Heart beating out of his chest, he
could barely contain his excitement as she lifted her eyes and met his gaze.
Blue eyes twinkled in his direction, and then she lifted her hand in a wave. A
wave? Something was wrong. Ash paused and then glanced self-consciously over
his shoulder. There was no one but him, and then he gazed back at her. She
crooked her finger, beckoning him
forward.
Completely under her spell, he
couldn’t deny her any more than he could cease from taking his next breath.
Finally, he stood before her, at least a foot taller than
she.
“Where have you been, you rogue?” She swatted him
on the arm and gave him a coy laugh. “I have been looking everywhere for
you!”
“For me?” Ash questioned. “Are you
certain we have met?”
“Must you always joke at such serious
times?” The girl laughed again, and he was caught at the sight of her dimples
as they danced along her cheeks. Carefree. She appeared so carefree, so
perfect, un-weighted by the things of this world, by the responsibility and
darkness, by disappointment. He tilted his head and then reached out to touch
her — perhaps she truly was a dream. And then a voice broke out into the
pounding in his ears.
“Ah, sweetheart, you’ve met my brother.” Hunter
stepped beside the girl and wrapped his arm around
her.
Ash stepped back, his heart sinking
down to his feet. She hadn’t been looking for him at all, but his older
brother, his twin, the duke. It was such a sad joke, a sad existence really.
Would he ever be first in anything?
Months had progressed into a year as he’d watched
his brother and Lucy fall into such a deep love all he had been able to do was
be happy for them and try to spend as much time away as possible. After all, it
was not done to want your brother’s wife, to want to care for her and protect
her. It was fate’s final, cruel trick to allow Ash to feel something for
another and then have that person ripped away by his brother. Though he loved
his brother more than his own life, it seemed Ash was always left with nothing
while his brother was given everything.
His name
fit.
For he was the ash after the fire of
Hunter burned out.
He was nothing but soot, darkness, and sand. One
day, his ashes would trickle away into the wind, never to be remembered and
never mourned, but forgotten.
“Ash! Do you hear me! I love you! I
love you!” Hunter yelled at his brother as he shook his shoulders, and then his
eyes widened with desperation as slapped him across the
face.
Ash stared at the blood staining his
hands. He tried to wipe it off. Tried but failed as it continued to drip down
his wrists into his jacket. “I’m so sorry,” he kept repeating over and over again,
but it did not matter.
The carriage had come too fast. Lucy
had thought Ash was Hunter and had run to him right into the
street.
The fault was
his.
He knew it, Hunter knew it, and Lucy, beautiful
Lucy, his brother’s innocent wife was dead, and it was all because he had lied
about who he was, tried to be better than just the second
son.
He backed away, slowly at first, and
then he ran.
His feet ached, his stomach heaved,
and finally he stopped in the middle of the street, hoping, praying that
someone or something would hit him. Death, it seemed, was his only option; it
was his wish, his choice. For how could he live with himself after what he had
done?
Hunter had loved Lucy, but so had Ash.
She was his everything, his only relative other than Hunter, and although he
had wanted her for himself, he had pushed those emotions so far beneath the
surface of his heart that he hadn’t understood how far the love had run until
now, until it was too late.
On legs like lead, he walked until he
reached the tombstone of his parents. Both taken from him too soon. What would
they think of him now? He was the disappointment in the family, the second son
by minutes. And now he was a murderer.
Disgusted with himself, he sat down on
the cold grass, leaned his head against the stone, and cursed. His brother —
his only living relative — and he had ruined his life and ruined his parents’
memory in the process. All he had ever wanted as a boy was to please his
father, yet all he’d received was disapproval. One time — just one time — he
wanted to make someone proud, make himself proud.
But it was
impossible.
He looked down at bloodstained
hands.
His future stared right back at
him.
Flee! He needed to flee, to get away.
No, not just get away. He needed to die. A life for a life. So he set about
doing exactly that. It was not fair that he was able to live, to survive, when
the one woman who had done nothing but brought happiness to everyone she’d met,
lay dead in the street.
“Lucy,” he whispered as salty tears
ran down his cheeks and across his lips. “I’m so sorry… but I will see you
soon. I will see you soon.” He reached into his pocket and pulled out the
pistol. With shaking hands he lifted it to his chin and pulled the
trigger.
Rachel Van Dyken is the New York Times, Wall Street
Journal, and USA Today Bestselling author of regency and
contemporary romances.
When she's not writing you can find her drinking coffee at
Starbucks and
plotting her next book while watching The
Bachelor.
She keeps her home in Idaho with her Husband and their
snoring Boxer, Sir
Winston Churchill. She loves to hear from readers! You can
follow her writing
journey at
www.rachelvandykenauthor.com
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