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A Year of Bramble

Monique Patterson
Monique Patterson

By Monique Patterson

I can hardly believe it’s already been a year since we announced the launch of Tor Publishing Group’s newest imprint, Bramble.

Let me take you back…way back in time. Ok, I’m exaggerating for dramatic effect.

In 2022, my friend and long time colleague, Devi Pillai, whom you all know as the Dark Lord and Emperor of the Tor Publishing Group approached me with the idea for a romance imprint. Tor has made itself the home for every other genrefrom horror to SFF to mystery and women’s fiction—and she felt it was high time for Tor to add romance to its stellar line up. 

I had spent 25 years publishing romance novels (and snatching SFF ARCs—with permission!—whenever I could), so this seemed like a perfect challenge. We pulled everything together behind the scenes and announced Bramble on Valentine’s Day 2023.

Since then, what’s happened?

I’m far from the only editor at Tor in love with romance, and Ali Fisher’s New York Times bestselling author, Jennifer Armentrout, has been writing romantasy before romantasy was a thing. We announced Bramble with Fall of Ruin and Wrath. Fall of Ruin and Wrath, an Indie Next Pick, is full of breathtaking suspense, scorching romance, and twisty court politics, perfect for fans of Sarah J. Maas… and to our extreme delight, but not surprise, it became a New York Times, USA TODAY, Wall Street Journal and Publishers Weekly bestseller (Run, don’t walk to get this book).

Then the immensely talented Constance Fay joined the Bramble line up. Constance writes space opera romances that read like Becky Chambers with the heat turned up, and all the riotous adventure of Firefly. She’s just sent us book 3 in her Uncharted Hearts series and I’m blown away by how every book is more amazing than the last. Constance describes Calamity,—another Indie Next Pick!—the first Uncharted Hearts book, as “sex, love, and hijinks.”

Then, right on time for Christmas, there was Carissa Broadbent and The Serpent & the Wings of Night which reads like a Court of Thorns and Roses with vampires. New fans clamored on board the Carissa Broadbent train and Serpent was an instant New York Times, USA Today and Publishers Weekly bestseller. Carissa is an author to watch, and we’re publishing the next chapter of Oraya and Raihn’s story in The Ashes & the Star-Cursed King in June 2024.

And I’m sure many of you have heard about this intriguing author and her simply iconic novel (with those deep purple edges!), because RuNyx is like no one else, and Gothikana is like nothing else. Even though it’s ceaselessly modern, don’t think this dark academia romance is anything less than the real, original Gothic-with-a-big-G deal. RuNyx absolutely knows her chops, and you will be utterly immersed in the dark romance between Corvina and Vad and the mysterious world of Verenmore University riddled with secrets and danger. At Bramble, we’ve been obsessed with Gothikana since last May, but it only published three weeks ago, to become an instant New York Times, USA Today and Publishers Weekly bestseller. One early reviewer said this book “changed [her] brain chemistry.” Join the cult.

Melissa Marr’s delightful lesbian witch romance is publishing next week (only six days!!!) and it was top of mind throughout last spring, because Melissa and I were in the thick of editing Remedial Magic. The incomparable Melissa first made her mark in 2007 with the iconic Wicked Lovely and has been publishing lovely contemporary fantasy ever since. I knew from the start that Remedial Magic would be perfect for Bramble, not the least because of Tor’s famously lesbian-rich catalog. Remedial Magic has the charming magic school dynamics of The Magicians and the magical lesbian romance of One Last Stop. The Terry Pratchett fans in the audience will adore Prospero, who reads as a sort of hot young Granny Weatherwax—the same talent for “headology,” the same resistance to change, the same terrifying determination to do what’s right, no matter what the cost.

New York Times bestseller, Lora Leigh is literally blazing back onto the scene with hard-bodied, steely eyed Navy SEALs with Play Dirty. I’ve been working with Lora Leigh since Dangerous Games and it’s been a wild ride ever since. With Play Dirty you get everything that your dark romance heart desires. A four on the heat scale!

Similarly, last summer we co-acquired Rebecca Thorne’s charming Tomes and Tea quartet with Tor UK. Rebecca is a delight, with an amazing TikTok presence, who writes coffee shop AUs of fantasy tropes, and of course, they’re all lesbians (see, I told you!). Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea and its sequel A Pirate’s Life for Tea follow Kianthe and Reyna as they nope out of the violence and politics of high court life to run away and open a bookstore (!) that sells tea (!!), where readers of Legends & Lattes (!!!) will feel right at home. Because these were initially self-published, they’re available as ebooks now, though we’re releasing trade paperback editions with gorgeous stained edges and a bonus short story in May (for Treason) and August (for Pirates). Check them out—you won’t regret it.

All you cozy fantasy romance fans will continue to rejoice with Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst, also coming this summer, about a librarian and her assistant, Caz the sentient spider plant, as Kiela navigates the low stakes market of illegal spellmaking and the high risk business of starting over both in life and love. For this one, we wanted you to feel like you had entered this special world the moment you looked at the cover. Those lavender sprayed edges are the bonus!

The business of starting a new imprint is always a whirlwind and there are constantly consequential decisions to make that will hopefully lead to the book and the author’s success. One of the many things that is key to a book knocking it out of the park is for the cover to be just as stunning as the story itself. Our art department, working with highly talented artists, has produced one amazing cover after another, but I want to call out The Friend Zone Experiment by Zen Cho, because it came out perfect, pretty much on the first try. We knew from day one that the artist needed to be Bo Feng Lin, and he absolutely hit it out of the park. The Friend Zone Experiment is the product of author Zen Cho’s covid k-drama obsession, combined with her other job as a high-powered London lawyer. It combines the ritzy family politics of Crazy Rich Asians with a charming second-chance love story, Zen’s amazing prose, and an energetic, snappy plot about misbehavior amongst the most powerful businessmen in Malaysia.

The other was Curvy Girl Summer by Danielle Allen, a sexy, fantastically funny novel about the perils of online dating (who doesn’t have a story or two that they can tell?). It’s also a story where Danielle Allen explores the dating scene for a big, beautiful Black woman and everything that brings. I absolutely adore the cover by Keo Majoy who knocked it out of the park. 

But that’s not all, we also signed The Coven and The Cursed by Harper L. Woods. These were originally indie published and took TikTok by storm with their combination of unspeakably spicy romance, dark academia, magic schools, and demonic lover to seal the deal. These are getting the kind of stenciled edges the readers have been begging for. Brace yourself for The Coven. It’s so steamy we had trouble even finding an excerpt for the back cover that didn’t set off the fire alarm.

There are icons, and then there’s J.T. Geissinger. J.T. writes the sort of deep, dark romance with a twist that will leave you breathless, stunned…and wanting more. And it just gets wilder and steamier from there, with the standalone Pen Pal, reading like It Ends With Us meets Momento. No spoilers…but whatever you’re expecting, you’re going to be fabulously wrong and left asking “what just happened?” in the best way possible. Soon after in a back-to-back extravaganza J. T. kicks off her Queens and Monsters series –no holds barred mafia romance–with Ruthless Creatures, where a woman realizes the debt this mysterious stranger has come to collect…is her. And yes, you’ll want to collect all four books in the series with their amazing packaging and beautiful sprayed edges.

The nature of publishing timelines means that we’re working on several years worth of books on any given day. Today, I was looking at the paperback edition of a book that was published last year while planning the announcements of incredibly exciting new projects and authors. Don’t worry. These delicious secrets will be revealed soon!

So, what’s a year of Bramble been? We started with a name and a vision and now we have a star-studded, BookTok buzzy list of superstars and potential superstars. More importantly, we have authors we hope will give you all the feels and keep you wide awake into the small hours of the morning as you joyfully turn the pages, falling in love every step of the way. We hope your list of Bramble book boyfriends and book girlfriends is long by the end of 2024. 

Sometimes I feel like I’ve stumbled into fairyland and a century passed in the blink of an eye. Sometimes I feel like I’m still dreaming—certainly, it’s not possible that all three hardcover books we’ve published hit the Times? Certainly, the cover and edges for The Stars are Dying by USA Today bestseller Chloe C. Peñaranda, aren’t that beautiful? Certainly The Nightmare Before Kissmas by YA rockstar, Sara Raasch, isn’t the cutest thing I’ve ever read? We definitely don’t have my favorite Australian (well, not named Hemsworth), Freya Marske writing, Swordcrossed, the most perfect fencing love story for us?

No one wake me up.

Monique Patterson is vice president and editorial director of Bramble. The quote “All great literature is one of two stories; a man goes on a journey or a stranger comes to town,” by Leo Tolstoy is one of her favorites, because it immediately sets to mind all the possibilities of a fantastic story. Finding books and authors that reach across the breadth of our experiences as humans is important to her. Publishing a wide array of romance, commercial women’s fiction, and a select amount of nonfiction allows Monique to explore all of those experiences. Some of her upcoming titles are The Ashes & the Star-Cursed Kingby Carissa Broadbent, Remedial Magicby Melissa Marr, Pen Pal by J.T. Geissinger, and The Coven and The Cursed by Harper L. Woods.

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It’s Trivia Time with BRAMBLE ROMANCE!!!

Who’s ready for some trivia?! To celebrate one year of Bramble and everything *romance*, we’re giving YOU a fun trivia game to play with the loved ones in your life this Valentine’s Day. Enjoy, and let us know if you play!


Bramble Trivia
Bramble Trivia

Round 1: Film & TV

  1. Nicholas Galitzine, who stars as Prince Henry in Red, White, and Royal Blue, is also starring in another gay romcom–which one is it (extra points if you can name his character)?
  2. In Miss Congeniality, what does Miss Rhode Island consider “the perfect date?”
  3. What song does Patrick sing to Kat on the bleachers in 10 Things I Hate About You?
  4. Which of William Shakespeare’s plays was the 2006 classic, She’s The Man, based on?
  5. Which bad boy vampire heartthrob hit TV screens in 2009?
  6. Why does Sandra Bullock’s character want to marry Ryan Reynolds in The Proposal?
  7. In the film Bridget Jones’ Diary, what color is the eponymous diary?
  8. In what movie does leading lady Amanda describe herself as “loner loser, complicated wreck?”
  9. Towards the end of the movie Crazy Rich Asians, Rachel plays (and beats) Nick’s mother in what game?
  10. In the Breakfast Club, Molly Ringwald’s character Claire Standish has a unique party trick. What is it?

Round 2: Books

  1. In Fall of Ruin and Wrath by Jennnifer L. Armentrout, what is Callista’s magical power?
  2. In Carissa Broadbent’s paranormal romance Crowns of Nyaxia series, what is the vampire death tournament called?
  3. Adelaide Forrest is the author of many spicy contemporary mafia series. But she ALSO writes dark romantasy novels under a different name. What is that name, and bonus points if you can also name the books?
  4. Bramble author Lora Leigh is writing about one of romancelandia’s favorite kind of leading men in her upcoming novel Play Dirty. What is the profession (technically former profession, but who cares) of this hero?
  5. What is the name of the girl who will live forever but is cursed to always be forgotten?
  6. In The Hating Game, the main character Lucy wears a particular shade of lipstick. What’s it called?
  7. How did the Bridgerton family lose their father?
  8. Name the author who created the grumpy Scottish blacksmith known as #swordbae. Extra points if you can name the book in which #swordbae first appears?
  9. In what iconic romantasy series is the phrase “love as thou wilt” a religious directive? Double points for author & series or book name.
  10. Melissa Marr is an upcoming Bramble romance author but she is also the author of a popular YA series about fae. What is that series called?
  11. Gilded age romance author Joanna Shupe just “came out” as the author of the popular mafia romance “Kings of Italy” series. What is the name of her mafia-romance author alias?

Round 3: Tropes & Miscellany

  1. What fanfiction archive was nominated for a Hugo Award?
  2. Bestselling author Kit Rocha is actually two people (gasp!). What are their names?
  3. Which trope combines weather patterns with one of the Seven Dwarves?
  4. Which Bramble author was first discovered because of their male/male original fic called The Course of Honor? Bonus points if you can name both the author and the name of the book this was turned into.
  5. Fated Mates is an (excellent) romance podcast co-hosted by romance critic Jen Prokop and which bestselling romance author?
  6. Whomst is Taylor Swift dating and what team does he play for, and what sportsball does he do?
  7. What delightful romance blog has the tagline “all of the romance, none of the bullshit?”

 

 

Answers

Round 1: Film & TV

  1. [Bottoms/Jeff]
  2. [April 25th]
  3. [“Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You” by Frankie Valli]
  4. [Twelfth Night]
  5. [Damon Salvatore]
  6. [She doesn’t want to get deported]
  7. [Red]
  8. [The Holiday]
  9. [Mahjong]
  10. [Applying lipstick using her cleavage]

 

Round 2: Books

  1. [Intuition/predict the future]
  2. [Kejari]
  3. [Harper L. Woods/The Cursed, The Coven]
  4. [Navy SEAL]
  5. [Addie LaRue]
  6. [Flamethrower red]
  7. [A bee sting]
  8. [Alyssa Cole, A Duke by Default]
  9. [Jacqueline Carey & the Kushiel’s Legacy series]
  10. [The Wicked Lovely series]
  11. [Mila Fineli]

 

Round 3: Tropes & Miscellany

  1. [AO3]
  2. [Donna Herren and Bree Bridges]
  3. [Grumpy/Sunshine]
  4. [Everina Maxwell/Winter’s Orbit]
  5. [Sarah MacLean]
  6. [Travis Kelcee, Kansas City Chiefs, football]
  7. [Smart Bittches, Trashy Books]

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Excerpt Reveal: Fall of Ruin and Wrath by Jennifer L. Armentrout

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fall of ruin and wrath by jennifer l. armentrout

SHE LIVES BY HER INTUITION. HE FEEDS ON HER PLEASURE.

From Jennifer L. Armentrout, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of From Blood and Ash, comes a searing fantasy romance for adults, Fall of Ruin and Wrath.

Long ago, the world was destroyed by gods. Only nine cities were spared. Separated by vast wilderness teeming with monsters and unimaginable dangers, each city is now ruled by a guardian—royalty who feed on mortal pleasure.

Born with an intuition that never fails, Calista knows her talents are of great value to the power-hungry of the world, so she lives hidden as a courtesan of the Baron of Archwood. In exchange for his protection, she grants him information.

When her intuition leads her to save a traveling prince in dire trouble, the voice inside her blazes with warning—and promise. Today he’ll bring her joy. One day he’ll be her doom.

When the Baron takes an interest in the traveling prince and the prince takes an interest in Calista, she becomes the prince’s temporary companion. But the city simmers with rebellion, and with knights and monsters at her city gates and a hungry prince in her bed, intuition may not be enough to keep her safe.

Calista must choose: follow her intuition to safety or follow her heart to her downfall.

Please enjoy this free excerpt of Fall of Ruin and Wrath by Jennifer L. Armentrout, on sale 9/12/23


Chapter 1

“Do you have a moment, Lis?”

Looking up from the chamomile I’d been grinding into a powder for Baron Huntington’s teas, I saw Naomi standing in the doorway of my chamber. The brunette was already dressed for the evening; the gossamer of her gown would’ve been completely transparent if not for the fabric’s strategically placed panels in a deep shade of cerulean.

The Baron of Archwood led, well, an unorthodox life compared to most mortals, but then again, Claude wasn’t just a mortal. He was a caelestia—a mortal that descended from the rare joining of a lowborn and Hyhborn. Caelestias were born and caelestias aged, just like us lowborn, and at twenty-six, Claude had no plans to marry. Instead, he preferred to spread his affection upon many. He, much like the Hyhborn, was a collector of anything beautiful and unique. And one would be unwise if one thought to compare oneself to any of the Baron’s paramours, but it was doubly foolish to measure oneself against Naomi.

With her glossy hair and delicate features, she was utterly breathtaking.

I, on the other hand, happened to look like someone had taken different traits from other people and pieced them together on my face. My small mouth didn’t match the natural pucker of my lips. My too-round, too-big eyes seemed to take up the entirety of my face, giving me the appearance of looking far more innocent than I was. That had come in handy more than once while I was on the streets, but I thought that I vaguely resembled those creepy dolls I’d seen in shopwindows, except with golden-olive skin instead of porcelain.

The Baron once told me I was interesting to look upon— “stunning” in an odd sort of way—but even if that weren’t so, I would still be his most favored, the one he kept close to him, and that had nothing to do with my odd attractiveness.

Tension crept into my shoulders as I shifted on the settee and nodded. Dragging my teeth over my lower lip, I watched her close the door and cross the sitting area of my quarters—my private quarters.

Gods, at twenty-two years of age, I’d been here for . . . for six years. Long enough for me not to be shocked by the knowledge that I had my own space, my own rooms with electricity and hot water, something that many places in the kingdom didn’t have. I had my own bed—an actual bed and not a pile of flat blankets or a mattress made of flea-infested straw—but I still couldn’t wrap my head around it.

I focused on Naomi. She was behaving strangely, repeatedly clasping her hands together and releasing them. Naomi was nervous, and I had never known her to be such.

“What do you need?” I asked, even though I had a feeling—no, I

knew exactly what she wanted. Why she was nervous.

“I . . . I wanted to talk to you about my sister,” she began— tentatively, and Naomi was never tentative in anything she did. There were few who were as brave and bold as her. “Laurelin has been unwell.”

My chest squeezed as my gaze returned to the bowl in my lap and the yellowish-brown powder within. This was what I’d dreaded.

Her sister had married a wealthy landowner above her so-called station in life. A union heralded as a true love match, something I would’ve normally scoffed at, but it was true. Laurelin was the rarity in a world where most married for convenience, opportunity, or security.

But what did love really do for anyone? Even her? It hadn’t stopped her husband from wanting a son even though Laurelin’s last birth had nearly taken her life. So she kept trying, no matter the risk.

He’d gotten his son now, and Laurelin had been struck with the fever that had taken so many after birth.

“I wanted to know if she will . . . ?” Naomi took a deep breath, stiffening her shoulders. “If she will recover?”

“I’m assuming you’re not looking for my opinion,” I said, grinding the pestle into the mound of chamomile. The slightly fruity tobacco scent increased. “Are you?”

“Not unless you have been moonlighting as a physician or midwife,” she replied dryly. “I want to know what the future holds for her.”

I exhaled softly. “You shouldn’t be asking this.”

“I know.” Naomi lowered herself to her knees on the floor beside me, the skirt of her gown pooling around her. “And I know the Baron doesn’t like it when someone asks you to do this, but I swear he will never know.”

My reluctance had little to do with Claude, even though he didn’t like it when I used my foresight—my heightened intuition—for anyone but him. He feared I’d be accused of being a conjurer dabbling in forbidden bone magic, and while I knew the Baron did worry about that, I also knew that it wasn’t the magistrates of Archwood he was concerned about. All of them were in the Baron’s pocket, and none of them would go against a Hyhborn, even if he was only a descendant of one. What he truly feared was that another with more coin or power would steal me away.

But his command to keep my abilities hidden and my own fear of being labeled a conjurer hadn’t stopped me. I just—I just couldn’t keep my mouth shut when I saw or felt something and was foolishly compelled to speak up. It was the same in all the places Grady and I had lived in before the Midlands’ city of Archwood, which had caused me to be accused of being a conjurer and led to us fleeing in the middle of the night more times than I cared to remember to avoid the hangman’s noose. My terminal inability to mind my own business was how I met Claude.

And it was also how people in the manor and beyond had learned of me—the woman who knew things. Not many, but enough.

The reason I didn’t want Naomi to ask this had everything to do with her.

When I first came to Archwood Manor, at sixteen, Naomi had already been here for about thirteen months. The same age as Claude, she was only a few years older than me, and clever, and she was so much more worldly than I could ever hope to be that I assumed she’d want little to do with me.

That hadn’t been the case.

Naomi had become, well, my first . . . friend outside of Grady. I would do anything for her.

But I feared I’d break her heart, and I was as terrified of losing her friendship as I was of losing the life I’d finally carved out for myself in Archwood. Because more times than not, people really didn’t want the answers they sought, and the truth of what was to come was often far more destructive than a lie.

“Please,” Naomi whispered. “I have never asked you anything like this before, and I . . .” She swallowed thickly. “I hate doing it, but I’m just so worried, Lis. I’m afraid that she will leave this realm.”

Her dark eyes began to glimmer with tears, and I couldn’t bear it. “Are you sure?”

“Of course—”

“You say that now, but what if it’s an answer you fear? Because if it is, I won’t lie. Your worry will turn to heartache,” I reminded her.

“I know. Trust me, I do,” she swore, the rich brown curls spilling over her shoulders as she leaned toward me. “It’s why I didn’t ask when I first learned of the fever.”

I bit down on my lip, my grip on the mortar tightening.

“I won’t hold it against you,” she said softly. “Whatever the answer is, I will not blame you.”

“You promise?”

“Of course,” she swore.

“Okay,” I said, hoping she spoke the truth. Naomi wasn’t a projector, meaning she didn’t broadcast her thoughts and intentions like so many did, making them far too easy to read.

But I could get inside her mind if I wanted to and find out if she spoke the truth. All I would need to do was open my senses to her and allow that connection to snap to life.

I didn’t do that when I could help it. It was too much of an invasion. A violation. However, knowing that hadn’t stopped me from doing it when it benefited me, had it?

Shoving that little truth aside, I drew in a breath that tasted of the chamomile as I set the bowl on a small table. “Give me your hand.”

Naomi didn’t hesitate then, lifting her hand, but I did, because it was so rare for my hand to touch others’ flesh without their intentions, and sometimes even their futures, becoming known to me. The only way I could touch another lowborn was to dull my senses, usually through alcohol or some other substance, and, well, that dulled everything else too and didn’t last very long, so there really was no point.

I wrapped my hand around hers, wanting to take just a brief second to simply enjoy the feeling. Most didn’t realize there was a world of difference between being touched and touching. But this wasn’t about me. I couldn’t take that second, because the longer I held Naomi’s hand, the more likely it was that I would end up seeing things about her she might not want to know or want me to learn. No amount of humming or keeping my mind active would stop that. Quieting my mind, I opened my senses and then closed my eyes. A second passed, and another; then a series of tingles erupted between my shoulder blades and spread up, over the back of my skull. In the darkness of my mind, I began to see the hazy form of Naomi’s face, but I shut that down.

“Ask the question again,” I instructed, because it would help me focus on only what she wanted to know and not everything else that was taking shape and forming words.

“Will Laurelin recover from her fever?” Naomi said in a voice barely above a whisper.

There was silence in my mind, and then I heard what sounded like my own voice whisper, She will recover.

A shudder of relief went through me, but my skin quickly chilled. The voice continued to whisper. Releasing Naomi’s hand, I opened my eyes.

Naomi had gone still, her hand suspended in air. “What did you see?”

“She’ll recover from the fever,” I shared.

Her throat worked on a delicate swallow. “Really?”

“Yes.” I smiled, but it felt brittle.

“Oh, thank the gods,” she whispered, pressing her fingers to her mouth. “Thank you.”

Now my smile was a grimace as I looked away. I cleared my throat, picking up the bowl. I barely felt the cool ceramic.

“Has Claude been having trouble sleeping again?” Naomi asked after a handful of moments, her voice lighter than it had been when she walked into the chamber.

Thankful for the change of subject, I nodded. “He wants to be rested for the upcoming Feasts.”

Naomi’s brows rose. “The Feasts don’t start for several more weeks—at least a month or so.”

I glanced at her. “He wants to be well rested.”

Naomi snorted. “He must be quite excited.” Leaning back, she toyed with a sapphire hanging from a thin silver necklace she almost always wore. “And what about you? You excited?”

I lifted a shoulder as my stomach tumbled a bit. “Haven’t really thought about it.”

“But this will be your first Feasts, right?”

“Yep.” It was the first year I was eligible to attend, as one must be twenty-two years of age or married, which made little sense to me, but it was the Hyhborn and King Euros who made the rules, not me.

“You are in for . . . quite the show,” she said slowly.

I snickered, having heard the stories.

She tipped toward me once more, her voice lowering. “But will you be partaking in the . . . in the festivities?”

“Festivities.” I laughed. “What a tame description.” She grinned. “What else would I call it?”

“An orgy?”

Tipping her head back, she laughed, and it was such a lovely, infectious sound. Naomi had the best laugh, causing a grin to tug at my own lips. “That’s not what happens,” she said.

“Really?” I stated dryly.

Naomi feigned a look of innocence, which was rather impressive considering there was little about her that could be called innocent. “The Feasts serve as a way for the Hyhborn to reaffirm their commitment to serving lowborn by sharing their wealth of food and drink.” She recited the doctrine as well as any prioress would as she folded her hands demurely in her lap. “Sometimes a lot of drink flows, and with the Hyhborn around, certain activities may occur. That is all.”

“Ah, yes, reaffirming their commitment to lowborn,” I said a bit sarcastically. She was speaking of the uppermost sphere of Hyhborn—the ones known as Deminyens.

When Deminyens emerged from the ground, it was said they came into existence fully formed and were ageless, capable of manipulating the elements and even the minds of others. Some of them were the lords and the ladies of the Hyhborn echelon, but those weren’t the most powerful of the Deminyens. The princes and princesses who ruled over the six territories within Caelum, along with the King, were the most frightening in their power. They could take different shapes, whip rivers into a frenzy with a flick of their wrists, and even seize the souls of the lowborn, creating the terrifying creatures known as the Rae.

Not much was known about any of them except for King Euros. Hell, other than Prince Rainer of Primvera, we didn’t even know their names. The only other one we ever heard about, and that was usually through the rumor mill, was the Prince of Vytrus, who ruled the Highlands, and that was because he was dreaded by most. After all, he was known as the hand that delivered the King’s wrath.

I almost laughed out loud right then. Hyhborn were the Protectors of the Realm, but I wasn’t exactly sure how they served us. Even though the Hyhborn were mostly like absentee landlords who came around only when the rent was due, the Hyhborn controlled everything about the lowborn’s lives—from who could obtain an education to who could own land or companies. And I was of the mind that the Feasts were more of a way to provide the Hyhborn with what they wanted. Our indulgence in all manner of things, from gorging on food to indulging in the delights of each other during the Feasts, also fed the Hyhborn. Strengthened them. Empowered them. Our pleasure was their sustenance. Their life force. It was more for them than it was us.

Because there were so many more ways they could prove that they cared for us lowborn, starting with providing food throughout the year to those in need. So many either starved or broke their backs in the mines or risked their lives on hunts to keep their families fed while the aristo—Hyhborn and the wealthiest of lowborn— became richer, the poor even more impoverished. It was the way things always had been and always would be, no matter how many lowborn rebellions rose up. Instead, they provided food only once a year, when much of the food went to waste while everyone was engaging in those certain activities.

But I didn’t say any of that out loud.

I might be reckless, but I wasn’t a fool.

“You know, they’re not all that bad,” Naomi said after a moment. “The Hyhborn, I mean. I’ve known of a few lords and ladies who have stepped in and aided those in need, and those in Primvera are kind and even caring. I think more are like that than not.”

At once, I thought of my Hyhborn—the unnamed lord who had touched my chin and asked how my arms had become so bruised. I didn’t know why I referred to him as mine. He obviously wasn’t. Hyhborn might fuck their way through the entirety of the lowborn race and then some, and a few might even claim a lowborn as theirs, at least for a time, but they were never a lowborn’s. It was just that I didn’t know his name, and it was an odd habit that had begun since that night.

Honestly, I doubted the Hyhborn lord had ever realized that he’d saved Grady’s life that night. The Mister would’ve punished him for talking back in front of Hyhborn, and far too many didn’t survive his punishments.

My stomach took a quick, sharp tumble like it always did when I thought of my Hyhborn, because I knew I would see him again.

That had yet to occur, and anytime I thought of it, I was filled with a mixture of dread and anticipation I couldn’t even begin to try to understand.

But maybe Naomi was right about many of them being what they claimed to be—Protectors of the Realm. Archwood flourished partly because of the ones in Primvera, the Hyhborn Court that sat just beyond the woods outside of the manor, and my Hyhborn had punished the Mister. Though he had done so rather brutally, so I wasn’t sure that was a good example of a kind and caring Hyhborn. “Do you…………….. do you think there will be Deminyens at the Feasts?”

I asked.

“There are usually a few of them that show.” Her brow creased. “I’ve even seen a lord or two in the past. I do hope they show this year.”

Toying with the pestle, I looked over at her.

Her grin turned sly as she twisted the silver chain around her fingers. “There’s never a need to use the Long Night with a Hyhborn,” she added, referencing a powder made from the seeds of a trumpet flower. The powerful herb, in the right dose, left one drowsy and without much memory of the time after ingesting it. “They are quite delightful.”

My brows rose.

“What?” she exclaimed with another robust, throaty laugh. “Did you know that the Hyhborn are known for climaxes that can last for hours—actual hours?”

“I’ve heard.” I wasn’t sure if that was true or not, but hours-long orgasms sounded intense. Possibly even a little painful.

Her gaze flicked to mine. “Are you able to touch a Hyhborn without knowing?”

“I’m not sure.” I thought about Claude and then my Hyhborn lord. “I can touch a caelestia for a little while before I start to know things, but I’ve never touched a Hyhborn before, and whenever I’m asked something that deals with them, I sense nothing. So, I’m not sure.”

“Well, might be worth finding out.” She winked.

I laughed, shaking my head.

She grinned at me. “I need to get going. Allyson has been a mess of late,” she said, speaking of one of the newest additions to the manor. “I need to make sure she has her head together.”

“Good luck with that.”

Naomi laughed as she rose, the gossamer pooling around her feet.

She started for the door, then stopped. “Thank you, Lis.”

“For what?” I frowned.

“For answering,” she said.

I didn’t know what to say as I watched her leave, but I didn’t want her thanks.

My shoulders slumped as I lifted my gaze to the slowly churning fan above me. I hadn’t lied to Naomi. Her sister would survive the fever, but the foresight hadn’t stopped there. It had kept whispering, telling me that death still marked Laurelin. How or why, I hadn’t allowed myself to find out, but I had a feeling—and my feelings were rarely if ever wrong—she wouldn’t live to see the end of the Feasts.

Copyright © 2023 from Jennifer L. Armentrout

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