War-weary soldier Goran von Hagen returns for the first time in years to the alpine estate where he was born. Here, although he does not suspect it, a strange destiny awaits.
"So much more than the garden-variety shapeshifter v. vampire story, as the hero engages with the day-to-day realities of his post-transformation self..."
After an exchange of letters, Goran and Mina decided to make
a summer journey to the neglected estate. This would be the best time to ride
the place over and find out how things were in the fields and forests of their
domain. Their younger siblings—all but Rupert—were still school boys, incapable of such duties.
It was not,
as his father had always said, a good thing to leave houses and property in the
hands of servants for any extended period. Even the best bailiff and staff
could lose their way. Herr Stocke, who had managed the place for so long, had grown
frail, and the Graf had concerns about relying so heavily upon a man who long
ago should have been comfortably retired. At the time, Goran believed he could
face anything with Veronique on his arm. Now, his twin, Mina, would have to help
him stay strong, but she, her little daughter, Charlize, and his youngest
sister, Birgit, had not yet finished their journey from Passau.
***
Being alone
in the house was painful. As soon as he had finished a good splash in the
basin, Goran abandoned the master bedroom. He’d often pictured Veronique there.
She’d have teased him, no doubt, laughing mercilessly about the antique bed-curtains.
They were embroidered with an erotic subject of nymphs and fauns--not at all to
his, or to any modern--taste--but a work of art, nonetheless. They’d been
purchased at great expense in pre-revolutionary France. Why his mother had
never replaced these wicked bachelor relics he had never understood. Goran had
heard stories that his father had been “a famous rake” before he’d settled down
to become a dedicated family man.
How often he’d
imagined her here, standing before a mirror, letting down her heavy blonde hair.
He’d have taken her in his arms, watched her lovely face flush with desire.
They’d begin the prelude, as they had many times before, and this time—this
time—it would happen, the fiery moment when she would allow him to enter her
lush body!
Instead, he was here, on the mountain--alone.
Goran donned
his knee-length riding coat. Habit caused him to check to be certain that his
boot knives were snug in place. During the war, he’d learned never to trust to the
safety of even the most familiar places.
He departed
in a hurry, for the bedroom seemed full of ghosts, banging his boots on the
stairs. From the sideboard in foyer he seized a dusty, half-full bottle of
brandy. He thought he’d walk—and drink. The house was worse than he’d thought.
A sensation of loss and grief pervaded the familiar rooms where he’d spent a happy
childhood.
~~Juliet Waldron
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