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| 23º libro: Tormenta oscura | |
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Autor | Mensaje |
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Sasha ¡Llegó tu hora! Sacrificio en el volcán
Mensajes : 8667 Edad : 109 Localización : En el Santuario de Delfos Empleo/Ocios : Oráculo a tiempo parcial Humor : Bipolar: ahora sí, ahora no... Inscripción : 21/07/2009
| Tema: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Dom 5 Feb 2012 - 21:34 | |
| TORMENTA OSCURADespués de haber pasado tanto tiempo encerrado en medio de la oscuridad y el calor, Dax se pregunta cómo habrá cambiado el mundo de la superficie. Pero lo que más le preocupa son los cambios que puede haber sufrido él mismo. Enterrado vivo durante siglos en un volcán sudamericano, Dax teme haberse convertido en precisamente la aberración de la naturaleza que más teme un carpatiano. Mientras tanto Mitro, el vampiro al que Dax ha perseguido durante tanto tiempo, también ha salido de su encierro. Representante de todo lo malévolo, ni sus amigos ni su familia pudieron protegerse de su sed de sangre. Ni siquiera su compañera del alma, la extraordinaria Arabejila. Dax y Mitro se disponen a librar la batalla definitiva, en la que se pondrán en juego no sólo sus propias vidas, sino la existencia de la hermosa Riley, la última descendiente de Arabejila.
Pues sí, por lo me dicen este va a ser el título del próximo libro de los carpas... DARK STORM (TORMENTA OSCURA)Y a las que todavía no abandonen a los carpas les anuncio que, después de contactar a Titania, me han confirmado que Tormenta oscura saldrá a la venta a principios de junio (2013)............................................................................................................................................................................... A partir de aquí se reúnen los datos que fuimos reuniendo desde el anuncio de este libro. La fecha prevista de lanzamiento -en inglés, claro- es el 2 de octubre de 2012... Pues eso, a esperar y especular... El extracto -en inglés- de Dark Storm que Feehan ha publicado con Samurai game... - Spoiler:
Evil permeated the very ground he slept in. Every breath he drew into his lungs brought the stench of malevolence deep into his body. Hunger crawled through him, clawing at his gut, pounding through every heartbeat, each pulse point. His fangs refused to retract. They had become permanent now, and with the edge of his tongue he could feel the slow lengthening of his canines. Sharp. Terrible. A heralding of the vile, foul abomination every male Carpathian feared, creeping relentlessly into his body and mind no matter how hard he tried to hold it back. Evil had an insidious way of creeping in at the very moment one was most vulnerable.
His world was one of absolute darkness, heat, and tremendous pressure. He’d been buried alive, trapped in the volcano for hundreds of years. Outside his prison, the world had changed and evolved, but he remained imprisoned in this eternal stasis, a mosquito trapped in an amber prison, if he was being poetic. But it was more like a hot lava bed of fire and stone and pure hell.
He searched his mind to remember his name—there had been so many. Names meant nothing in his world; they never had. His species was immortal and they moved from century to century, shedding identities and acquiring new ones, taking on the customs, languages, and names of those around them so they blended into whatever world they lived in. Once, so long ago, he’d had a birth name—the name his family had given him—but then so had the vile creature he’d chased across continents.
Of all the names he’d called himself over the centuries, Dax was the only one left from his ancient heritage, a small part of the original very long name he’d been given at birth. After tracking the vampire to this continent, he’d taken the name of a fierce warrior of the Chachapoyas people and had become one of them. Later, when the Incas arrived, easily overrunning the Chachapoyas whose numbers had already been decimated by the vampire, he’d shed his Chachapoya identity and assumed an Incan persona, learning their language and customs by reading the minds of the people. Then, like always, he’d become what he must to hunt his prey.
All bloodlines save one—the Dragonseekers—knew the horror, the tragedy, of watching family members succumb to the curse of their species. The more powerful the lineage, the quicker, deeper, and more potently they grew once a warrior made the choice to turn vampire. This vampire, the one Dax had hunted all these long centuries, was the epitome of evil. He came from an extremely powerful line—second in command to the prince of the Carpathian people.
Dax had known the ancient Carpathian warrior, as had all warriors in their community. And they’d all known the moment Mitro Daratrazanoff made the choice to turn wholly vampire. All his life, Mitro had carried power like a mantle of authority, but his ego had been wounded beyond repair when the prince had passed over Mitro and chosen one of Mitro’s younger brothers to serve as his second. Mitro’s hatred grew, as well as his vanity, until he wanted his entire family and the prince dead.
Driven mad by his hatred, he rejected his lifemate, Arabejila, a beautiful Carpathian woman with astonishing gifts, and in doing so he’d rejected the salvation she could have given him. That alone was a crime unheard of in their world, but Mitro compounded his sins by trying to kill her, to drain of her blood and life. Mitro had the insane idea that should he murder his lifemate as he made the transformation, he would be the most powerful of all vampires and could easily destroy his famous family and that of the prince.
Thinking he could betray and kill Arabejila while still Carpathian proved impossible. He took her blood, but the lifemate bond refused to allow him to use his other half as his entry to transform to pure evil. But he’d killed her mother and father and left Arabejila dying, bleeding out on the ground beside their dead bodies. Worse, her mother had been pregnant with another long-sought-after female child. Arabejila had dragged herself to her mother and cut open her belly to save the unborn infant.
Dax had arrived to find blood and death everywhere, his oldest friend and partner’s entire family savagely destroyed by Mitro Daratrazanoff. Arabejila and her mother were daughters of the earth, their female magick important to the entire Carpathian people. The unborn female child would carry that same gift, although she was several centuries younger than her only sister. Never before in the history of the Carpathian world had such a crime been committed. One Carpathian had deliberately killed two females and attempted to kill a third before he’d actually turned vampire. It had been murder—pure and simple. And once the blood-lust was on him, Mitro continued his killing spree across continents.
The infant was premature and Arabejila was near death. Dax had given both his blood to save them, tying them to him for all time, something few warriors ever did. The earth had reached for Arabejila, healing her so that she could make the journey with him quickly, her blood calling to that of her lifemate. They left her unnamed sister in the hands of another Carpathian couple and set out on the trail of Mitro. That trail led them from one killing field to another. Century after century, horrendous battles took place where both hunter and hunted nearly died time and again. Always Mitro managed to escape until they had at last trapped him here, in this volcano.
The plan had been Dax’s, but it was Arabejila who had lured Mitro to the mountain. Mitro couldn’t resist the call of his lifemate, no matter how hard he tried. Once Mitro was inside with Dax chasing him, Arabejila would call to the mountain to aid her in containing the vampire. She didn’t like the plan, because it meant Dax would end his days there, but she obliged with the promise that as she knew she wouldn’t be able to last long with her lifemate estranged, she would find a good human man among the remaining Tahuantinsuyu or Incas and have a child to carry on her work.
The stirring in his gut told him the vampire was on the move. The crust had grown thin, far too thin, and the pressure inside the volcano was appalling. The vampire’s triumph could be felt through the mountain. Over the last few centuries, after Arabejila had allowed herself to die, each succeeding ancestor had been more human than Carpathian. The women had come to the mountain and, as Arabejila had insisted, had even given birth there to ensure their connection with the earth. The binding had grown weaker over the last few years, not lasting as it should.
Three times the woman had come just in time… but not this time. Mitro’s vicious glee filled the volcano, his will pushing continually at the thinnest part of the crust. He sent out his evil, delaying the woman on her trip, finding weaker minds to entice to his bidding. Arabejila’s blood relation was in danger and she wouldn’t make it to the mountain in time to prevent Mitro’s escape.
Dax searched for the vampire throughout the vast network of chambers and caves. The entire mountain stank of evil, completely obscuring Mitro’s trail from the hunter. Throughout the long years, they’d each done their best to kill the other, but they were evenly matched and they’d only sustained horrendous wounds, recovering in the heated soil time and again, only to engage once again.
Mitro was avoiding all confrontations now, seeing his chance to escape. While they were locked in the remote mountain, the world had passed them by. Dax could only hope that the Carpathian hunters had grown strong and much more skilled than Mitro. Dax was starved and would need recovery time to take up the hunt. He had kept his muscles in shape and practiced his hunting skills to keep himself sane, but he feared his mind was half animal now, and that the invasive evil had crept into his very bones. It would take tremendous discipline, if he found actual substance, not to drain the donor dry.
He prepared himself for the inevitable, but sent a prayer to whatever gods might be, to mother earth herself, that the woman arrived in time.
Un breve resumen de lo que pasa en este extracto de Dark Storm por si alguien tiene problemas con el inglés: - Spoiler:
Mitro Daratrazanoff era un cárpato al que le sentó muy mal que el príncipe cárpato de aquella época nombrara a su hermano menor como segundo al mando y no a él. Ávido de poder, Mitro pensó que si mataba a su compañera sería un cárpato más poderoso -ya que nadie había hecho tal "proeza" o barbaridad-. Así que Mitro rechazó a su compañera Arabejilla y mató a la madre embarazada de ésta. Tb trató de asesinar a Arabejilla -aunque no la pudo matar debido al lazo entre compañeros-. Arabejilla no murió desangrada -como Mitro esperaba- sino que sobrevivió y salvó a su hermana nonata, sacándola del vientre de su madre muerta. Esa bebé sería entregada a otra pareja cárpata para que la criaran.
Después de esto, Mitro se convirtió en un poderoso y malvado vampiro. Dax y Arabejilla trazaron un plan para capturarlo. Sin embargo, aunque consiguieron que Mitro quedara encerrado en un volcán, lo cierto es que Dax tb quedó prisionero. No se podía hacer mucho. Arabejilla aseguró la tierra del volcán para que Mitro -y Dax- no escapara y así fue pasando el tiempo.
Arabejilla decidió unirse a un humano y más tarde, se dejó morir -algo así como lo que pensaba hacer Francesca con el médico ese que la cortejaba-. De la unión de Arabejilla con el humano fueron naciendo varias generaciones de mujeres -más humanas que cárpatas- que tenían que ir a la montaña donde estaban aprisionados Mitro y nuestro valiente Dax para asegurar la tierra y que no pudiera escapar el malvado vampi de allí -aunque, claro, tb se quedaba atrapado Dax, pobre-. Y, bueno, la última mujer descendiente de Arabejilla y su marido humano va a ser la prota del libro y compañera de Dax. Se llama Riley.
El booktrailer de Dark Storm... - Spoiler:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rg0es6OGmSM&feature=player_embedded
Y aquí os pongo el texto del booktrailer por si alguien no lo entiende: Yo soy más que un cárpato, más que un guerrero ancentral inmortal, porque yo he sido poseído por algo mucho más poderoso, algo más antiguo que yo mismo. Yo he sido aprisionado con un enemigo, un vampiro, un mal que va a ser liberado en la tierra. Se acerca una tormenta oscura... y soy yo. Y aquí va el primer capítulo de Dark Storm donde por fin podemos conocer a la prota, Riley!!! - Spoiler:
I can live with being on a small boat with no privacy for seven long days, the sun turning me into lobster girl, and mosquitoes feasting on me, I really can,” Riley Parker informed her mother. “But I swear to you, if I hear one more complaint or disgusting sexual innuendo from Mr.-I’m-so-hot-every-woman-should-bow-down-to-me, I'm just going to shove the idiot overboard. His constant licking his lips and saying he likes the idea of mother and daughter gives me the creeps. ”
Riley cast a glance of pure loathing at Don Weston, the annoying idiot in question. She’d met a lot of narcissistic pigs while earning her doctorate in linguistics and a few more among the faculty at University of California, Berkeley where she now taught, but he took the cake. He was a great brute of a man, with wide shoulders, a barrel chest and an attitude of superiority that irked Riley. Even if she wasn’t already so much on edge, the presence of that awful man would have made her so. Worse, her mother was very fragile right now making Riley extremely protective of her and his constant sexual innuendos and filthy jokes around her mother made her want to just shove him overboard.
Annabel Parker, a renowned horticulturalist famous for her efforts to re-establish thousands of acres of Brazilian rainforest lost to deforestation, looked at her daughter, dark brown eyes twinkling and mouth twitching, obviously itching to smile. “Unfortunately, honey, we’re in piranha territory.”
“That’s the point, Mom.” Riley cast another pointed glare in Weston’s direction.
The only benefit of the horrible man’s presence was that plotting his demise gave her something to focus on other than chills slowly spreading through her body and making the hair on the back of her neck stand up.
She and her mother made this same trip up the Amazon once every five years, but this year from the moment they had arrived in the village to find their usual guide ill, Riley felt as if a dark cloud hung over the trip. Even now, a strange heaviness, an aura of danger, seemed to be following them up the river. She’d tried hard to shrug it off, but the ominous feeling remained, a weight pressing down on her, chills creeping down her spine and ugly suspicions keeping her awake at night.
“Perhaps if I could accidently cut his hand as he goes overboard...” she continued with a dark smile. Her students could have warned the man to beware when she smiled like that. It never boded well. The smile faded a little, though as she glanced down at the murky water and saw the silver fish churning around the boat. Were her eyes playing tricks on her? It almost looked as if piranha were following the boat. But, piranha didn’t follow boats. They went about their business.
She stole a glance at the guide who muttered to the two porters, Raul and Capa, ignoring their charges--a far cry from the familiar villager who usually took them upriver. The three looked very uneasy as they continually studied the water. They too, seemed a little more alarmed than usual about being surrounded by a swarm of flesh-eating fish. She was being silly. She’d been on this same trip many times before without freaking out over the local wildlife. Her imagination was working overtime. Still... piranha seemed to be all around their boat, but she couldn’t see a single flash of silver in the waters surrounding the boat chugging ahead of them.
“Ruthless child,” Annabel scolded with a small laugh, drawing Riley’s attention back to the aggravating presence of Don Weston.
“It’s the way he looks at us,” Riley griped. The humidity was so high that every shirt Riley wore clung to her like a second skin. She had full curves and there was no hiding them. She didn’t dare raise her hands to lift her thick, braided hair off the back of her neck or he would think she was deliberately enticing him. “I really, really, wanted to smack that oaf. He stares at my breasts like he’s never seen a pair which is bad enough, but when he stares at yours...”
“Maybe he hasn’t ever seen breasts, dear,” Annabel said softly.
Riley tried to smother a laugh. Her mother could ruin a perfectly good mad with her sense of humor. “Well if he hasn’t, it’s for good reason. He’s disgusting.”
Behind them, Don Weston slapped his neck and hissed out a slow, angry breath. “Damn insects. Mack, where the hell is the bug spray?”
Riley suppressed an eye roll. As far as she was concerned, Don Weston and the other two engineers with him were liars--well at least two of the three. They claimed to know what they were doing in the forest, but it was clear neither Weston nor Mack Shelton, his constant companion, had a clue. She and her mother had both tried to tell Weston and his friends that their precious bug spray would do no good. The men were sweating profusely, which washed off the insect repellent as fast as they could apply it and left them feeling sticky and itchy. Scratching only aggravated the itching as well as invited infection. The smallest wound could quickly become infected in the rainforest.
Weston’s colleague and friend, Mack Shelton, a compact man with burnt mahogany skin and rippling muscles swatted at his own neck and then his chest, murmuring obscenities. “You threw it overboard, you big bastard, after you used the last of it.”
Shelton was a little friendlier than the other two engineers and not quite as obnoxious as Weston, but instead of making Riley feel safer, his proximity actually made her skin prickle. Maybe that was because his smile never reached his eyes. And because he watched everything and everyone on board. Riley had the feeling Weston vastly underestimated the other man. Clearly Weston thought himself in charge of their mining expedition, but no one was bossing Shelton.
“We should never have thrown in with them,” Riley murmured to her mother, keeping her voice low. Normally, Riley and her mother made the trip to the volcano alone, but when they’d arrived at the village, they found their regular guide too sick to travel. Alone in the middle of the Amazon, without a guide to accompany them to their destination, she and her mother decided to team up with three other groups travelling upriver.
Weston and his two fellow mining engineers had been in the village prepping a trip to the edge of the Andes in Peru, in search of potential new mines for the corporation they worked for. Two men researching a supposedly extinct plant had arrived from Europe seeking a guide to go up the mountain in Andes as well. An archeologist and his two grad students were heading to the Andes looking for a rumored lost city of the Cloud people---the Chachapoyas. All of them had decided to pool their resources and travel upriver together. The idea seemed logical at the time, but now, a week into the journey, Riley heartily regretted the decision.
Two of the guides, the archeologist and his students, and three porters were in the lead boat just ahead of them with a good deal of the supplies. Annabel, Riley, the researchers and the three mining engineers were in the second boat with one their guide, Pedro and two porters, Capa and Raul.
Trapped on the boat with seven strangers, Riley didn’t feel safe. She wished they were already halfway up the mountain, where the plan was to go their separate ways, each with their own guide.
Annabel shrugged. “It’s a little too late for second thoughts. We made the decision to travel together and we’re stuck with these people. We’ll make the best of it.”
That was her mother, always calm in the face of a brewing storm. Riley was no psychic, but it didn’t take one to predict trouble was coming. That feeling was growing with every passing hour. She glanced at her mother. As usual she appeared serene. Riley felt a little silly saying aloud she was worried when Annabel had so many other things on her mind.
Still bickering about the discarded bug spray, Weston flipped Shelton the finger. “The can was empty. There must be more.”
“It wasn’t empty,” Shelton corrected, disgust in his voice. “You just wanted to chuck something at that caiman.”
“And you’re aim was as bad as your mouth,” The third engineer, Ben Charger, chimed in.
Ben was the quietest of the bunch. He never stopped looking around with restless eyes. Riley hadn’t quite made up her mind about him. He was the most ordinary looking of the three engineers. He was average height, average weight, a face no one would notice. He blended and maybe that made her uncomfortable. Nothing about him stood out. He moved quietly and seemed to simply appear out of nowhere--and he watched everything and everyone--as if he was expecting trouble. She didn’t believe he was a partner with Weston and Shelton. The other two stuck together and obviously had known one another for some time. Charger appeared to be a loner. Riley wasn’t even certain he liked either of the other two men.
Off to the left shore, her eye picked up a white cloud, moving fast, sometimes iridescent, sometimes a pearly color as the cloud twisted together, forming a blanket of living insects.
“Fuck you, Charger,” Weston snapped.
“Watch your mouth,” Charger advised, his voice very low.
Weston actually stepped back, his face paling a little. He glanced around the boat, his gaze settling on Riley, whom he caught looking at him. “Why don’t you come over here, or better yet, mommy come here and lick the sweat off me? Maybe that will help.” He extended his tongue toward her, probably hoping to look sexy, but he got a mouthful of bugs and ended up coughing and swearing.
For one terrible moment, when he called her mother ‘mommy’ and made his gross suggestion, she thought she might hurl herself at him and really push him overboard, but then, with her mother’s little snicker, her anger was gone, her unfortunate sense of humor kicking in. She burst out laughing. “Seriously? Are you really so arrogant you don’t know I’d rather lick the sweat off a monkey? You are just so gross.”
Out of the corner of her eye, she caught sight of the pearly cloud of insects growing closer, widening as they moved in formation over the water. Her stomach gave a little flip of fear. She forced air through her lungs. She wasn’t one to scare easily, not even when she’d been a child.
Weston leered at her. “I can see when a woman wants me and baby, you can’t take your eyes off of me. Look at your clothes? You’re showing off for me.” He flicked his tongue at her again looking for all the world like a snake.
“Leave her the hell alone, Weston,” Jubal Sanders snapped, impatience edging his voice. “Don’t you ever get tired of the sound of your voice?”
One of the two men researching plants, Jubal didn’t appear to be a man who spent a lot of time in a lab. He looked extremely fit and there was no doubt that he was a man used to a rugged, outdoor life. He carried himself with absolute confidence and moved like a man who could handle himself.
His traveling companion, Gary Jansen, looked more the part of the lab rat, shorter and slender although very well muscled from what Riley had observed. He was very strong. He wore black-rimmed reading glasses, but he seemed every bit as adept outdoors as Jubal. The two kept strictly to themselves at the beginning of the journey, but somewhere around the fourth day, Jubal became a little protective of the women, staying closer whenever the engineers were around. He said little, but he didn’t miss anything.
Although some other woman might be flattered by his protectiveness, Riley wasn’t about to trust a man who supposedly lived his life in a lab, but moved with the fluid grace of a fighter. Both he and Gary clearly carried weapons. They were up to something and whatever it was, Riley and her mother had enough trouble of their own without needing to get involved in anyone else’s.
“Don’t be a hero,” Weston snapped at Jubal, “it won’t get you the girl.” He winked at Riley. “She’s lookin’ for a real man.” Riley felt another small surge of anger wash over her and she whipped around to glare at Weston, but her mother laid a gentle, restraining hand on her wrist and put her head close to whisper. “Don’t bother, honey. He’s feeling like a fish out of water out here.”
Riley took a breath. At this late date, she wasn’t going to resort to violence over sexual harassment no matter how much of an ass the man was. She could ignore Don Weston until they went their separate ways.
“I thought he was supposed to be so experienced,” Riley answered her mother, her voice equally as soft. “They claim to be mining engineers who traveled to the Andes countless times, but I’m betting they flew over the peaks and called that going into the rainforest. They probably don’t have anything at all to do with mining.”
Her mother gave a quick nod of agreement, warmth lighting her eyes all the same. “If they think this is bad, wait until we get into the jungle. They’ll be falling out of their hammocks and forget to check each morning for venomous bugs crawling into their boots.”
Riley couldn’t help but smile at the thought. The three engineers were supposedly from a private company seeking prospective mines in the mineral rich Andes. She couldn’t see that any of them were very well versed in the ways of the rainforest and they sure didn’t give much respect to their guides. All three complained, but Weston was the worst and most offensive with constant sexual innuendoes. He spent a great deal of time snapping at the guides and porters as if they were servants when he wasn’t complaining or leering at her and her mother.
“I raised you away from here, Riley. The men in some countries have a different philosophy toward women. We aren’t considered their equal. Clearly he’s been raised to believe women are objects and because we’ve come out here alone, unescorted by a dozen family members, we’re easy.” Annabel shrugged, but the faint humor faded and her dark eyes went very somber. “Keep that dagger close, honey, just to be on the safe side. You know how to handle yourself.”
Riley shivered. It was the first time Annabel had indicated she thought something was amiss as well. That moved Riley’s fanciful notions from ridiculous right back into the realm of reality. Her mother was always calm, always practical. If she thought something was wrong, then it was.
A bird sounded in the forests on the riverbank, the noise travelling clearly across the open water. To lighten her mother’s suddenly troubled mood, Riley cupped her hands around her mouth and repeated the call. She didn’t get the delighted laughter she’d hoped for but her mother did smile and pat her hand.
“That’s totally freaky how you can do that.” Don Weston had left off slapping at bugs and was now staring at her like she was some carnival side show. “Can you imitate anything?”
Despite her dislike of the man, Riley shrugged. “Most things. Some people have photographic memories that let them remember anything they see or read. I call what I have ‘phonographic’ memory. I can remember and repeat virtually any sound I hear. That’s one of the reasons I went into linguistics.”
“That’s quite a talent.” Gary Jansen remarked.
“Isn’t it?” Annabel slid an arm around Riley’s waist. “When she was little, she used to imitate crickets chirping inside the house just to watch me go crazy trying to find them. And heaven help her father if he slipped up and used language he shouldn’t in front of her. She could repeat it perfectly--right down to the pitch of his voice.”
Riley’s heart dropped at the sorrow and love in her mother’s tone. She forced a little laugh. “I was also good at mimicking my teachers, the ones I wasn’t particularly fond of,” she volunteered with a small, mischievous grin. “I could call from school and tell mom just what a wonderful student I was.” Now her mother did laugh, and the sound filled Riley with relief.
To Riley, Annabel was beautiful. She was of medium height, slender, with dark wavy hair and darker eyes, Spanish flawless skin and a smile that made everyone around her want to smile. Riley was much taller, with bone-straight blue-black hair that grew almost overnight no matter how many times she cut it. She was very curvy, with high cheekbones and pale, nearly translucent skin. Her eyes were large and the color was nearly impossible to define--green--brown--Florentine gold. Her mother always said she was a throwback to a long dead ancestor.
To her knowledge, her mother had never been sick a day in her life. She had no wrinkles and Riley had never seen a single gray hair on her head. But now, for the first time, Riley saw vulnerability in her mother’s eyes and that was as unsettling as the crackling in the air signaling a coming storm. Riley’s father had died only two weeks ago, and in their family, husband and wife rarely lived for very long without one another. Riley was determined to stick close to her mother. She could already sense Annabel pulling away, becoming more despondent by the day, but Riley was determined not to lose her. Not to grief, and not to whatever was hunting them on this trip.
Early morning had seen the last of the main river, the two boats were now traveling up a tributary toward their destination. In the reed-choked waters, the ever present insects were getting worse by the moment. Clouds of bugs continually assaulted them. More rushed toward the boat as if scenting fresh blood. Weston and Shelton both went into a frenzy of cursing and slapping at exposed skin, although they both remembered to keep their mouths firmly closed after eating a mouthful of bugs. Ben Charger and the two botanists endured the insects stoically, following the example set by their guide and the porters.
The locals in their party didn’t bother to even slap at the bugs as the pearly cloud descended en masse. Riley could see the boat ahead and they were even closer to the shore, yet so far as she could tell, the bugs hadn’t attacked anyone aboard. Behind her, Annabel let out a soft startled cry. Riley spun around to find her mother completely enveloped in the cloud of insects. They’d abandoned everyone else and every inch of Annabel’s body was covered with what appeared to be tiny flakes of moving snow.
La Manta Blanca. Tiny midges. Some said tiny mosquitoes. Riley had never researched them, but she’d certainly felt their bites. They blazed like fire and afterward, the itch drove one crazy. Once scratched and open, the little bites became an invitation for infection. She dragged a blanket off the flat board seat and threw it over her mother, trying to smash the little bugs as she took her mother to the floor of the boat, rolling her was if she was putting out a fire.
“Get it off of her,” Gary Jansen called. “You won’t get them all that way.”
He crouched down beside Annabel and yanked at the blanket. Annabel rolled back and forth, her hands covering her face, the insects attached to every bit of exposed skin, clinging to her hair and clothes. Many were smashed from Riley’s efforts. She continued to slap at them, trying to save her mother from further bites.
Jubal snatched up a bucket of water and threw it over Annabel, brushing at the insects to get them off of her. The porters immediately added buckets of water, dousing her again and again, while Gary, Jubal and Riley scraped the soaked insects from her with the blanket. Ben eventually crouched down beside her and helped to pick the bugs from her skin.
Annabel shuddered violently, but she didn’t make a sound. Her skin turned bright red, as a thousand tiny bites swelled into fiery blisters. Gary rummaged through a satchel he carried and drew out a small vial. He began smearing the clear liquid over the bites. It wasn’t a small job as there were so many. Jubal held Annabel’s arms pinned so that she couldn’t scratch at the maddening itch spreading like waves across her body.
Riley clutched her mother’s hand tightly, murmuring nonsense. Her previous suspicions came roaring back to life. The tiny little midges had gone straight for her mother. There was no one more tuned to the rainforest than Annabel. Plants grew abundant and lush around her. She whispered to them and they seemed to whisper back, embracing her as if she were Mother Earth. When her mother walked through the back yard at their home in California, Riley was fairly certain she could see the plants growing right in front of her. For the forest to begin attacking her, something was terribly wrong.
Annabel gripped Riley’s hand tightly as the two researchers lifted her to her feet and helped her stumble back to their sleeping area made private by the sheets and netting hung across thin ropes.
“Thank you,” Riley said to the two men. She was all too aware of the stunned silence out on deck. She wasn’t the only one to notice that the white bugs had attacked her mother and no one else after their initial swarm. Even those knocked from her body had struggled to their feet and crawled toward her as if programmed to do so.
“Use this on the bites,” Gary Jansen said. “I can make up some more once we’re in the forest if she runs out. It will take the edge off.”
Riley took the vial from him. The two men exchanged a look above her head and her heart jumped. They knew something. That look had been meaningful. Profound. She tasted fear in her mouth and quickly looked away, nodding her head.
Annabel attempted a half hearted smile and murmured her thanks as the two men turned to go, giving the women privacy to find bites beneath clothing.
“Mom, are you all right?” Riley asked, the moment they were alone.
Annabel gripped her hand tightly. “Listen to me, Riley. Don’t ask questions. No matter what happens, even if something happens to me, you must get to the mountain and complete the ritual. You know every word, every move. Perform the ritual exactly as you’ve been taught. You’ll feel the Earth moving through you and...”
“Nothing’s going to happen to you, mom,” Riley protested. Fear was giving away to sheer terror. Her mother’s eyes reflected some inner turmoil--some inner knowledge of a danger she knew of that Riley was missing--more a terrible vulnerability that had never been there before. None of the married couples in their family ever long-survived the loss of a spouse, but Riley was determined her mother would be the exception. She’d been watching her mother like a hawk since her father, Daniel Parker, died in the hospital following a major heart attack. Annabel had been grieving, but she hadn’t seemed despondent or fatalistic until now. “Stop talking like this, you’re scaring me.”
Annabel struggled into a sitting position. “I’m giving you necessary information, Riley. Just as my mother gave it to me. And her mother before her. If I can’t get to the mountain, the burden falls on you. You are part of an ancient linage and we’ve been given a duty that has passed from mother to daughter for centuries. My mother took me to this mountain, just as her mother took her. I’ve taken you. You are a child of the cloud forest, Riley, born there as I was. You drew your first breath on that mountain. You took it into your lungs and with it, the forest and all that comes with living, growing things.”
Annabel shuddered again and reached for the vial in Riley’s hands. With shaking hands she drew up her shirt to reveal the tiny midges clinging to her stomach, brushing to get them off of with trembling fingers. Riley took the vial and began smearing the soothing gel onto the bites.
“When my mother told me these things, I thought she was being dramatic and I scoffed at her,” Annabel continued. “Oh, not to her face of course, but I thought her so old and superstitious. I’d heard the stories of the mountains. We lived in Peru and some of the older people in our village still whispered about the great evil that came before the Incas and could not be driven away, not even by their most fierce warriors. Stories. Dreadful, frightening stories handed down for generations. I thought the stories had been passed down mostly to scare the children and keep them from roaming too far from the protection of the village, but I learned better after my mother died. Something is there, Riley, in the mountain. Something evil, and it’s our job to contain it.”
Riley wanted to believe her mother was delirious with pain, but her eyes were steady--even more--afraid. Annabel believed every word she was saying and her mother wasn’t given to flights of fancy. More to reassure her mother than because she actually believed the nonsense about some evil being trapped inside a mountain, Riley nodded.
“You’re going to be fine,” she assured. “We’ve been bitten by Manta Blanca on previous trips. They aren’t poisonous. Nothing’s going to happen to you, mom.” She had to say the words aloud, needing them to be true. “This was only a bizarre event. We know anything can happen in the rainforest...”
“No Riley.” Annabel caught her daughter’s hand and held it tight. “All the delays...all the problems since we arrived... something is happening. The evil in the mountain is deliberately trying to slow me down. It is close to the surface and is orchestrating accidents and illness. We have to be realistic, Riley.” Her body shuddered again.
Riley hunted through her pack and came up with a packet of pills. “Antihistamine, mom, take a couple of these. You’ll probably go to sleep but at least the itching will stop for awhile.”
Annabel nodded and swallowed the pills, chasing them with water. “Don’t trust anyone, Riley. Any one of these people can be our enemy. As soon as possible we must go our own way.”
Riley bit her lip, refraining from saying anything at all. She needed time to think. She was twenty-five years old and had been to the Andes four times not including when she was born in the cloud forest. This was the fifth trip that she remembered. The hike through the rainforest had been grueling, but she’d never felt terrified as she was now. It was too late to turn back and from what her mother said, it wasn’t an option. She needed to let her mother rest and then they had to talk. She had to learn much more about the why of the trip to the Andes.
She dropped the sheet in place as soon as her mother appeared to be drifting off and went out onto the deck. Raul, the porter, glanced at her and looked quickly away, clearly uncomfortable with the presence of both women. Goosebumps rose on her arms. She rubbed them away, turning to walk along the railing to try to put some distance between her and the rest of the passengers. She just needed a little space.
There wasn’t enough room aboard the boat to find a quiet corner. Jubal and Gary, the two researchers, sat together in one of the few secluded spots, and judging from the expressions on their faces, they weren’t very happy. She gave them a wide berth, but in doing so ended up beside Ben Charger, the third engineer, the one she couldn’t quite make up her mind about. He was always courteous to both women and, like Jubal and Gary, seemed to be developing a protective streak toward them.
Ben nodded at her. “Is your mother all right?”
Riley flashed him a tentative smile. “I think so. I gave her an antihistamine. Hopefully between that and the gel Gary gave us, the itch won’t make her crazy. Those are nasty little bugs.”
“She must have been wearing something that attracted them,” Ben ventured, half stating, half asking. “Maybe a perfume?”
Riley knew her mother never wore perfume, but it was a good explanation. She nodded slowly. “I didn’t think of that. The attack was so bizarre.”
Ben watched her face intently, his eyes so watchful, she found his gaze disturbing. “I’ve heard you and your mother have come here before. Has anything like that ever happened?”
Riley shook her head, grateful she could tell the truth. “Never.”
“Why do you and your mother come to such a dangerous place?” Ben asked curiously. Again he didn’t blink, or take his eyes from her face. He stared at her with the eyes of a interrogator. “It’s my understanding that even the guides haven’t traveled to this mountain. They had to get the information from a couple of others in the village. It seems such a strange destination for two women. There aren’t any villages on the mountain, so you’re not here for the linguistics.”
Riley gave him a vague smile. “Mother’s work as a horticulturist and advocate for the protection of rainforests takes us many places. But we come here also because we’re descendants of the cloud people and my mother wants us to learn as much as possible so the people aren’t forgotten.” She pressed her lips together and put a defensive hand on her throat. “That sounded mean. I love the rainforest, and I enjoy the trips with my mother. I was actually born in the cloud forest, so I think my mother thought it would be a good tradition to carry on coming every few years.” She glanced toward the guides and lowered her voice. “We weren’t certain these men actually knew the way, that’s why we thought it would be safer traveling with all of you.”
“I’ve never been,” Ben admitted. “I’ve traveled around many rainforests, but not to this particular mountain. I don’t know why Don said we all had been here before. He likes to think he knows everything about everything. Is the forest as dangerous as everyone says?”
Riley nodded. “Very few people have ever traveled to this peak. It’s a volcano and, although it hasn’t erupted in well over five hundred years, I’m suspicious sometimes that it’s waking up, although mostly because of the way the locals talk about it.
There’s some story handed down through the various local tribes about that mountain, so most avoid it. It’s difficult to actually find a guide willing to travel to it.” She frowned. “Truly it has an off-putting feeling. You find yourself growing uneasy the higher you climb.”
Ben ran both hands through his hair, almost as if he was agitated. “This entire side of the rainforest seems infested with legends and myths. No one wants to talk about them to outsiders and all of them seem to involve some creature that preys on the lives and blood of the living.”
Riley shrugged. “That’s understandable. Practically everything in the rainforest is out for your blood. I’ve heard the rumors, of course, and our guide told us that it wasn’t the Incas who destroyed the cloud people, or the Spanish, but the locals and descendents whisper of a great evil who murdered in the night, sucking the life from them and turning families against one another. The cloud people were fierce in battle and gentle in their home life, but they supposedly succumbed one by one or fled the village to the Incas. When the Incas came to conquer the forest people, apparently most of the warriors were already dead. It’s rumored that the Inca’s living here, suffered the same fate as the ones killed by the marauding evil. Their bravest warriors died first.”
“That’s not in the history books,” Ben said.
Still, she had the feeling he wasn’t surprised, that he’d heard that whispered version. There were many more stories, of course, each more frightening than the other. Tales of bloodless victims and the tortures and horrors they’d endured before being murdered.
“Are you talking vampires?”
She blinked. He’d slipped that question in so casually. Too casually. Ben Charger had a deeper agenda than mining for coming to the barely explored region. Old legends? Could he want to write? Whatever his reasons, Riley was certain they had nothing to do with mining. She frowned, thinking it over. Could the evil entity whispered about be a vampire? The myth of the vampire seemed to have existed in every ancient culture.
“I honestly have no idea. I’ve never heard whatever the entity is called a vampire, but the languages have changed so much over the years, quite a bit is lost in translation. I suppose it’s possible. Vampire bats play an important part in Inca culture and in the Chachapoyas as well. At least based on what little my mom’s told me and what I’ve managed to learn on my own. There isn’t a lot to go on.”
“Fascinating,” Ben said. “If we get a chance, I’d like to hear more. I find cultures interesting and here, in this part of the rainforest, the tribes and stories seemed to be shrouded in mystery which intrigues me all the more. I’m a bit of an amateur writer and I take every opportunity when exploring a new region to learn as much as I can about old myths. I find that no matter where I go, certain legendary creatures have infiltrated into the cultures all over the world. It’s intriguing.”
At a soft sound, Riley turned to find her mother standing close. Annabel was unguarded for a moment, her face swollen with bites, her eyes watchful and very suspicious of Ben. Riley stared at her in surprise. Her mother was the most open, gentle woman Riley had ever been around. She didn’t have a mean, suspicious bone in her body. As a rule she shared information, was at ease with everyone and most people gravitated toward her. Riley always felt protective toward her mother because she was so trusting where Riley wasn’t.
Annabel blinked and the look of suspicion was gone, leaving her mother simply looking at Ben. Riley felt a little as if her world was spinning. Nothing, no one -- not even her mother -- seemed familiar. “You should be resting, mom. So many bites can make you sick.”
Annabel shook her head. “I’m okay. The gel Gary gave me is very soothing. It took the itch away and you know the bites aren’t poisonous. Gary and his friend must be very good at studying the properties of plants, because the gel really works.”
Ben glanced over at the two men. Although both were clearly American, Gary and Jubal had journeyed from somewhere in Europe, to search for a mythical plant with extraordinary healing properties that supposedly grew high in the Andes. By the expression on his face, he thought both men were slightly insane.
Annabel took Riley’s hand and they nodded at Ben and moved toward the railing of the boat, in the center where they were alone.
The river narrowed more so that in places the huge root systems of the trees along the bank nearly scraped the boat. Lines of bat swayed high in the tree, an eerie sight. They were large, hanging upside down up in the thick canopy. Riley had seen the sight before, even as a child, but for some strange reason, this time it was disturbing, as if the bats were laying in wait, motionless, waiting for dark to begin the hunt--this time for human prey. She gave a little shudder at her own dramatic fantasy.
She was allowing the edginess of close confinement to get to her. She knew better. The bats were large and definitely vampire bats--feeding on warm blood--but she doubted if their hunger was personal and certainly they weren’t just waiting for an unsuspecting boatload of humans to come along.
She felt eyes on her and turned to see Don Weston staring at her. He grinned and pretended to shoot an imaginary rifle at the motionless creatures. Riley turned away. Weston’s need to be the center of attention, every moment disgusted her. But his reaction to the bats was just a little too close to the way she was feeling--and she didn’t want to feel anything at all in common with the man.
She turned her attention back to her mother, taking her mother’s hand and gripping it tightly. This morning they’d left the main river and began the journey up the tributary toward one of the most remotes parts of Peru. The jungle had closed around them, at times nearly scraping the sides of the two boats chugging upriver. The forest was in constant motion, almost as if the very animals were following them. Monkeys stared with great round eyes. Colorful macaws fluttered above their heads darting in and out of the tree canopy.
They were definitely entering the world of the rainforest, the lush jungle of mystery that only deepened and became more dangerous with each passing second. The river narrowed, and the air grew still with the dark pungent scents of the deep rainforest. She recognized the signs. Soon, the river would be impossible to navigate. They would be forced to abandon the boats and tramp through the forest on foot. Unlike many places in the rainforest where it was easy to walk because very little could live on the forest floor without too much light, this area was dense. She’d travelled extensively, but the smells and the stillness of this place was a thing she’d found nowhere else on earth. Unlike any of her previous visits, this time Riley felt a little claustrophobic.
“Hey Mack,” Don called to the other engineer. “What the hell is going on now? I swear the jungle is alive.” He gave a nervous laugh as he pointed out the strange way the branches dipped down and reached toward them as the boat passed.
Everyone turned to watch the bank closest to them as a great green wave built, following them. Every branch shivered, leaves unfolding and stretching out across the water as if seeking to stop their progress up river. The first boat had passed unscathed, but the moment the second boat came close to the bank, the leaves reached for them. The stirring was eerie, as if the jungle had really come alive like Don said.
Riley’s heart dropped. She’s seen the phenomenon many times before. Her mother attracted plants everywhere she went. There was no getting around it. The force of the magnet in her had never been quite this strong, but the thick foliage along the both banks welcomed her with opened arms, even grew inches in an attempt to try to touch her. It never was good to draw too much attention to oneself in the rainforest around the superstitious guides and porters. Riley felt a deep need to protect her mother. She stepped between her mother and the bank, gripping the railing with both hands and staring out at the unfolding plants with wide, shocked eyes.
“Wow,” she added to the sudden murmur of conversation. “This is amazing.”
“It’s creepy,” Mack said, stepping back away from the rail.
The porters and guide stared at the reaching plants and trees and then turned to look directly at Annabel. They whispered to each other. Riley felt other eyes on them. Both Gary and Jubal were looking at her mother as well. Only the three engineers stared into the rainforest as it closed in around them.
The two boats continued upstream drawing closer to the mountain. Black caimans, giant dinosaurs of the past, sunned themselves on the banks, keeping a hungry eye on the small boats invading their space. Great clouds of black insects bit every inch of exposed skin and got caught in hair and even teeth, this time mosquitoes and other blood-sucking bugs. There was nothing to do but endure it. Below them, the dark waters grew shallow, slowing progress and twice, the boat ground to a halt and had to be cut free of the tangled reeds reaching out greedily to wrap about the underside of the motor and propeller. Each time the unexpected lurch sent everyone aboard sprawling across the deck.
Weston picked himself up with an oath and staggered to the side of the boat to spit into the water. “This is ridiculous. Couldn’t you have found another way?” He demanded of their guide, Pedro.
The guide shot him a tense look. “There is no easy way to this place you want to go.”
Weston rested his butt on the railing as he gave the guide the finger. “I think you’re just trying for more money and it’s not going to happen, pal.”
Pedro muttered something in his language to the two porters.
This one the jungle can eat, Riley interpreted. She didn’t blame them.
The guide and porters snickered.
Weston lit a cigarette and glared out over the dark water. The boat staggered again and then, as they were all desperately trying to gain their footing, it gave a huge lurch. Weston fell forward, hanging up for one heart-stopping moment on the railing. Everyone leapt to help him as he hung precariously, arms down, closer to the water.
Riley caught his belt buckle while Annabel reached over the side to grasp at his arms. The moment Annabel leaned down, arms covering Weston’s, the water came to life, boiling like a cauldron, flashing silver with muddy patches of red.
“Mom!” Riley cried, reaching for her mother, still holding Weston. His weight was pulling them all forward.
The others rushed to help as Annabel slipped further toward the dark, reed-choked water, now boiling with frenzied piranha. There was no blood in the water so the turmoil made no sense. To Riley’s horror the fish began to leap out of the water, hundreds of them, narrow bodies and blunt head shooting from the river like rockets, the triangular-shaped jaw with razor-sharp teeth snapped open and shut with terrible clacking sounds.
Although the stories of piranha frenzies abounded, Riley knew attacks on people were quite rare. She’d swum in the water with them on several occasions. This bizarre behavior was extraordinary, as unnatural and unsettling as the La Manta Blanca attack. And just like with the Manta Blancas, it seemed clear the piranha were bent on reaching her mother, not Don Weston.
It was Jubal who caught Annabel and yanked her back away from the rail, practically throwing her into Gary. Then he caught Weston and hauled him back on deck, too. Instead of being grateful, the engineer slapped at Jubal’s hands, cursing and sliding down to sit on the deck, his breath coming in great gasps. He glared at Pedro and the two porters as if the three men had deliberately tried to murder him.
The guide and porters both stared at Annabel with a look that made Riley wish she had a concealed gun close at hand. Before anyone could speak, the boat nearly ran aground and the two natives turned back to their work. A low branch overhead dipped down and a snake dropped onto the deck with a thud right at Don Weston’s boots.
“No one move,” Jubal hissed as the viper stared at the engineer. “That snake’s extremely poisonous.”
Pedro, the guide, turned back, catching up the machete that was always close. Before he could take a step, the viper did an abrupt spin and launched itself at Riley. She stumbled back into her mother. The snake flashed between her legs heading straight at her mother. Gary Jansen yanked Annabel off her feet and twisted around, holding her in the air while Jubal shoved Riley aside, yelling at the guide, hand up in the air.
Pedro tossed the machete and in one smooth movement, Jubal slammed the sharpened blade across the neck of the viper, severing the head. There was a moment of silence as Gary lowered Annabel to the deck, holding her steady so that she didn’t fall.
“Thank you,” Riley breathed softly to both researchers. She didn’t try to hide the fact that she was very shaken.
Her mother stared at her with stricken eyes. Riley’s world crumbled. Capa, Raul and Pedro looked at her mother with the same look they had on their faces when they’d first seen the viper. They were in real trouble if the guides and porters became hostile toward them. She reached for her mother’s hand and held on tightly. - Citación :
- Dark Storm is about an ancient who hunted one of the strongest master vampires and when he couldn't defeat him, he sacrificed himself and with the aid of a Carpathian woman,( and no, she
wasn't his lifemate) trapped himself and the vampire inside of a volcano. That volcano is about to blow!
Tormenta Oscura es sobre un cárpato antiguo (un anciano) que cazó a uno de los maestros vampiros más fuertes. Sin embargo, cuando el antiguo vio que no podía derrotar al vampiro, decidió sacrificarse y, con la ayuda de una de las mujeres cárpatas -que NO es su compañera- se encerró junto con el vampiro en un volcán. Ahora este volcán está a punto de entrar en erupción!!! - Citación :
Spoiler: | 03/04/2012 Ah... yes... 'Dark Storm' happened to come up! A few of the details that the 'Queen of Tease' was willing to divulge: 1) we're going to learn lots more about the 'Flower Lady' - she is not the heroine, but we will find out more info about her in the telling of this story; 2) the hero is an Ancient, and the heroine is a human; 3) we will see two characters from previous books, and there was a very strong indication that one of those would be Gary. That was about all she was willing to surrender, despite obvious digs for more! :) But it's a little something to gnaw on until September! |
Las ideas fundamentales son:
-Vamos a saber más sobre la FLOWER LADY. Ella NO es la heroína pero descubriremos más información sobre ella en este libro.
-El héroe es un Anciano. La prota es una humana.
-Veremos a dos personajes de libros anteriores y hay muchas posiblidades de que uno de ellos sea Gary.
- Citación :
Spoiler: | So we have some "news" for the heroine:
Christine Feehan 4 hours ago Hi Christyle. I wouldn't want your brain cells to explode or die or anything. that's kind of drastic. especially when you need them to read. so something about the heroine's background. I can tell you her mother is traveling with her. they come from the U.S. and they must make the journey every five years. see, I'm nice about this. all those people who say I'm not forthcoming need to see my posts! I'm feeling very good at one in the morning.
Christine Feehan 4 hours ago heroine is grows in courage and skills fast. She's from a family of action and, although she has never been called upon, circumstances force her to step up! love that type of intrepid heroine.
Christine Feehan 5 hours ago oh dear, there seems to be a switch in identitities going on here. all for a little dark storm information. rainforest, jungle machetes, lots of blood, plants needed for research, volcanos exploding, old world, illusion.... is that good????? | -El volcán en el que está encerrado nuestro cárpato se ubica en un bosque fluvial (Por poner ejemplos, se nombran a Ecuador, las Galápagos… pero no hay nada concreto).
-La heroína viaja con su madre a este lugar cada cinco años. Las dos parten desde los Estados Unidos.
-La heroína crece en valor y habilidades de manera rápida. Proviene de una familia dada a la acción y, aunque ella nunca ha tenido que encarar un verdadero desafío, ahora las circunstancias la fuerzan a ello. (Aquí la autora añade que este es el tipo de personajes que más le gustan).
-En otro mensaje Feehan deja caer algunas palabras como pistas de lo que podemos encontrar en este libro: bosque fluvial, machetes, jungla, montones de sangre, búsquedas de plantas para la investigación, volcanes erupcionando, mundo antiguo, ilusión.
Añado algo que he leído en otros comentarios:
-La heroína tiene carácter.
-El primer capítulo se centra en la heroína -aunque habrá un prólogo en el que se rumorea que se podría decir algo de lo que le pasó al antiguo-.
-Habrá una lluvia tormentosa.
- Citación :
Spoiler: | Return to the seductive world of Christine Feehan's New York Times bestselling Carpathian novels as roiling passions collide in a perfect storm of dangerous desire that only a precious few can hope to outrun . . .
Awakening after all this time in a world of absolute darkness and oppressive heat, Dax wonders in how many ways the world above must have changed. But it is how he has changed that fills him with dread and loathing. Buried alive for hundreds of years in a volcano in the Carpathian Mountains, Dax fears that he has become the full-fledged abomination that every Carpathian male fears, a victim of the insidious evil that has crept relentlessly into his mind and body over the centuries. But there are some things that never change.
His name is Mitro, the vampire Dax had hunted all these long centuries. Second in command to the prince of the Carpathian people he is the epitome of everything malevolent, and perpetrator of one of the most shocking killing sprees known to man - and beast. Even his friends and family weren't safe from Mitro's bloodlust. Neither was Mitro's lifemate, Arabejila, an extraordinary woman with extraordinary gifts. But now that Dax has re-emerged, so too has Mitro. The ultimate battle between good and evil has been re-engaged. Between Dax and Mitro, a violent game has begun - one that has marked Riley Parker, the last descendent of Arabejila, as the reward.
|
Vamos, que en resumen: DAX -nuestro carpa- se encerró en un volcán en los Cárpatos para parar a MITRO, el vampiro que fuera el segundo al mando del príncipe cárpato y responsable de una de la más terribles masacres conocidas. MITRO se convirtió en tan peligroso que ni sus amigos ni su familia estaban a salvo. Ni tan siquiera su compañera ARABEJILA, una mujer extraordinaria con dotes increíbles. El caso es que ahora DAX y MITRO se han levantado y se va a dar una última batalla entre el bien y el mal. Y ¿a quién va a pillar esta batalla de por medio? Pues a RILEY PARKER, la última descendiente de Arabejila... Y para condimentar todo este jaleo, tenemos a un prota, DAX que está desfasado con los tiempos actuales y que está preocupado por creerse un monstruo y blablabla... Se aclara algunas cosas......... - Citación :
- Por cierto, hace unos días Feehan publicó una rectificación y disculpa porque la sinopsis que se ha publicado de Tormenta oscura tiene algún error -debido a que el libro está escribiéndose aún y la historia no está cerrada-:
-En la sinopsis se dice que el vampiro fue segundo del príncipe cárpato pero eso NO es verdad, según comenta ahora Feehan.
Feehan tb ha aprovechado para desvelar o confirma algunos datos:
-Tal como algunas especulaban, el vampi es un antecesor de la línea Daratrazanof. -El nombre del carpa prota, DAX, es una abreviación de su nombre cárpato... que es más complicado de usar, según la autora. -Tb se confirma al 100% la presencia de GARY en este libro del que la autora dice que es un personaje de valor inestimable así como el humano de más confianza que tiene el pueblo cárpato y uno de sus personajes favoritos. (Traducción personal de esto: que no creo que le mate ni que le convierta en el traidor del que tanto se habla). - Citación :
- El cárpato DAX no lo ha nombrado en ninguno de sus anteriores libros y por lo que se dice que puede ser una nueva linea de Dragones que no se ha nombrado antes
13/05/12: Feehan dice que NO hemos conocido a ningún familiar de DAX en los libros publicados. Tb dice que necesitaba refrescarse un poco con una pareja nueva. Es por eso que no ha cogido a ningún cárpato que conociéramos para escribir su historia. Tb avisa de que no nabrá muchas interacciones con cárpatos conocidos.
Última edición por Sasha el Miér 17 Jun 2015 - 2:33, editado 21 veces (Razón : Actualización) |
| | | Fantástica Buscando grupo de ayuda
Mensajes : 26861 Edad : 46 Localización : En medio del océano... Empleo/Ocios : Pensar y meditar... Humor : Raro, raro, raro... Inscripción : 21/12/2010
| | | | Sasha ¡Llegó tu hora! Sacrificio en el volcán
Mensajes : 8667 Edad : 109 Localización : En el Santuario de Delfos Empleo/Ocios : Oráculo a tiempo parcial Humor : Bipolar: ahora sí, ahora no... Inscripción : 21/07/2009
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Lun 6 Feb 2012 - 15:57 | |
| Cierto, Fantástica, estaba tan histérica cuando vi la noticia que no puse nada sobre los protas. Bien, el caso es que Feehan posteó el título del libro hace un par de semanas. A las preguntas de las lectoras de quiénes iban a ser los protas, ella contestó lo siguiente: "I REALLY don't have any idea. I had a great idea and the heroine is slipping away from me. My poor editor, I already gave her that heroine and she's probably madly working away on the back copy and then I'll have to tell her sorry, she backed off on me. *sigh* those carpathians can be as elusive as the leopards. "Resumiendo, que ni ella misma tiene claro quiénes serán los elegidos. Hablaba de que se le había ocurrido una gran ideas sobre la heroína pero que ahora no la veía tan clara... lo que le traerá problemillas con su editor. Por lo visto, la prota es un tanto escurridiza para Feehan... En otros comentarios, Feehan dice que hasta que no empiece a escribir el libro -próximamente- no se decidirá con los protas. Pues eso, que a esperar y a especular. De momento, a conformarnos con el título y la fecha de publicación... Por lo visto, me da a mí que Dimitri y Skyler no van a ser los afortunados... |
| | | Fantástica Buscando grupo de ayuda
Mensajes : 26861 Edad : 46 Localización : En medio del océano... Empleo/Ocios : Pensar y meditar... Humor : Raro, raro, raro... Inscripción : 21/12/2010
| | | | seles Soy sonámbula: Escribo también dormida
Mensajes : 4938 Edad : 34 Localización : Buenos Aires Empleo/Ocios : Estudiante de Klingon Humor : Constantemente... Inscripción : 25/09/2009
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Miér 8 Feb 2012 - 3:17 | |
| Ayyyyy gracias Sasha!!!! Y había visto la portada pero no los nombres de los protas de Samurai Game no veo la hora de que los publique... |
| | | Sasha ¡Llegó tu hora! Sacrificio en el volcán
Mensajes : 8667 Edad : 109 Localización : En el Santuario de Delfos Empleo/Ocios : Oráculo a tiempo parcial Humor : Bipolar: ahora sí, ahora no... Inscripción : 21/07/2009
| | | | naomi_chan Reencarnada en cazadora
Mensajes : 9670 Edad : 35 Localización : Buenos Aires Empleo/Ocios : Profesora Humor : Poniendome al dia con el foro Inscripción : 14/01/2009
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Miér 8 Feb 2012 - 18:23 | |
| Recien veo el tema por ahora lo dejo asi porque lo Samurai Game no esta dentro del tema que se centra aca asi que despues lo movere para el otro lado De todos modos gracias por la imformacion Sasha despues averiguare si hay mas datos sobre el libro porque no sabia nada......por ahora eso es todo aunque es un poco apresurado publicar el tema y tendria que cambiarse el titulo porque habria especulaciones y queda medio mal pero eso lo consulto con Eureni que anda por ahi metida |
| | | Sasha ¡Llegó tu hora! Sacrificio en el volcán
Mensajes : 8667 Edad : 109 Localización : En el Santuario de Delfos Empleo/Ocios : Oráculo a tiempo parcial Humor : Bipolar: ahora sí, ahora no... Inscripción : 21/07/2009
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Jue 9 Feb 2012 - 19:02 | |
| Quizá es un poco pronto abrir este post porque hasta septiembre no sale el libro. Pero, bueno, el título es ese: Dark Storm. Christine lo comentó hace un par de semanas, cuando anunció que estaba acabando Samurai Game. Dijo que el siguiente libro con el que se va a poner es con este de los cárpatos, Dark Storm. De hecho, hace unas nueve horas afirmó que ya lo iba a empezar a escribir. El título lo he traducido al castellano como Tormenta oscura... porque me parece bastante obvia la traducción... no sé... Si quieres lo quito... ya me dirás... Y sí, sorry por lo del libro de la otra saga... considéralo como un pequeño desvarío... Por cierto, para las que tienen alguna esperanza de que los protas de este libro sean Skyler y Dimitri... aquí dejo el último comentario que hizo Feehan sobre esta pareja... Fue el 13 de marzo del año pasado. Dijo que habían comenzado a susurrarle... que su historia estaba más cerca... pero, de todas formas, ella necesitan que los protas le griten... Vamos, que yo no tengo muchas esperanzas de que sean ellos... - Spoiler:
03/13/2011 Christine Feehan: "...Skyler is finally beginning to whisper in my ear a little so that generally means, the story is closer, but I never know until the characters are yelling at me."
|
| | | naomi_chan Reencarnada en cazadora
Mensajes : 9670 Edad : 35 Localización : Buenos Aires Empleo/Ocios : Profesora Humor : Poniendome al dia con el foro Inscripción : 14/01/2009
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Vie 10 Feb 2012 - 4:32 | |
| Sasha con el desvario Lo de Dimitri y Skyler ya se habia comentado el año pasado y dejalo asi, cuando Eureni se desida pasar por aca se vera por ahora se deja a si |
| | | Haru Psíquica
Mensajes : 155 Edad : 34 Localización : Galaxia 8, planeta 1, 3-A Empleo/Ocios : Proteger el universo Humor : Sí Inscripción : 17/09/2011
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Dom 12 Feb 2012 - 19:57 | |
| - Sasha escribió:
-
Quizá es un poco pronto abrir este post porque hasta septiembre no sale el libro. Pero, bueno, el título es ese: Dark Storm. Christine lo comentó hace un par de semanas, cuando anunció que estaba acabando Samurai Game. Dijo que el siguiente libro con el que se va a poner es con este de los cárpatos, Dark Storm. De hecho, hace unas nueve horas afirmó que ya lo iba a empezar a escribir. El título lo he traducido al castellano como Tormenta oscura... porque me parece bastante obvia la traducción... no sé... Si quieres lo quito... ya me dirás...
Y sí, sorry por lo del libro de la otra saga... considéralo como un pequeño desvarío...
Por cierto, para las que tienen alguna esperanza de que los protas de este libro sean Skyler y Dimitri... aquí dejo el último comentario que hizo Feehan sobre esta pareja... Fue el 13 de marzo del año pasado. Dijo que habían comenzado a susurrarle... que su historia estaba más cerca... pero, de todas formas, ella necesitan que los protas le griten... Vamos, que yo no tengo muchas esperanzas de que sean ellos...
- Spoiler:
03/13/2011 Christine Feehan: "...Skyler is finally beginning to whisper in my ear a little so that generally means, the story is closer, but I never know until the characters are yelling at me."
Graxias, Sasha por la información. Entoncs ¿esto es lo último q comentó la escritora sobre Skyler y Dimitri? No sé qé pnsar. A lo mjor la pareja del libro son ellos. No? Si le estaban hablando más alto, qizá ahora ya le hayan gritado. Y bueno es sabr que ya lo está escribiendo. A ver si da más pistas. El nombre dl libro tb me gusta. Pero no te da pistas sobre qiénes serán los protas. Qizá alguna de las tías de Lara? Por lo q recuerdo la primita de Solange ya podría ir dando a luz. ¿Dirán algo de ese bebé? ¿O ni siquiera nacerá para este libro? A ver si van cayendo más datos!! que estoy en ascuas |
| | | andamo ¡Dios! ¡No calla ni bajo el agua!
Mensajes : 2687 Edad : 46 Localización : Valencia (nacida en Târgoviste Empleo/Ocios : Sigo lo que me motiva Humor : me lo dejo en casa a veces Inscripción : 22/12/2009
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Miér 15 Feb 2012 - 12:39 | |
| Esta autora y las voces de dentro de su cabeza , a veces me pone enferma Ahora le da por decir el titulo del libro pero dice que no sabe sobre quien es vaya bobadas ... eso es marketing puro y duro Aun así espero sus libros veis como su estrategia tiene éxito |
| | | Sasha ¡Llegó tu hora! Sacrificio en el volcán
Mensajes : 8667 Edad : 109 Localización : En el Santuario de Delfos Empleo/Ocios : Oráculo a tiempo parcial Humor : Bipolar: ahora sí, ahora no... Inscripción : 21/07/2009
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Mar 21 Feb 2012 - 2:45 | |
| Pequeña novedad. Hace unos días Feehan posteó esto sobre los protas de Dark Storm: February 14, 2012 Christine Feehan: Valentine present to everyone. Dark Storm has new hero and new heroine not previously known, although the heroine's ancestor is known. Isn't that a nice present?????? Ahí va un regalo de San Valentín para todas. Tormenta oscura tiene un nuevo héroe y una nueva heroína. A ninguno de ellos los hemos conocido previamente, aunque un ancestro de la protagonista es alguien que sí conocemos. ¿Y qué están especulando las feehanistas? -Que la prota es una de las hijas perdidas de Razvan. (Ya sabeis que Natalya comentó que su hermano había tenido una mujer en París (madre de Skyler), en California (madre de Colby), en Texas (posible hija desconocida) y vete tú a saber cuántas más... yo preferiría no ser Ivory... eso de que a mi chico le salgan hijos por todos lados... -Que el prota es uno de los guerreros que acude a los Cárpatos por la llamada masiva para proteger al príncipe. -Que quizá el prota sea un desconocido Buscador de Dragones. -Que quizá el prota sea un familiar de los Savage -y se explique así lo de los extraños ojos dorados, tan impropios de los cárpatos-. Y mil cosas más... ahora la especulación se está adueñado de todas... Y, por cierto, sobre la relación de parentesco entre Sindyl e Ivory, Feehan ha dicho que eso es, de momento, TOP SECRET y que no va a revelarlo todavía. EDIT: Acabo de encontrarlo... un mensaje de Feehan que cuenta de qué va el libro -solo un poco-: Dark Storm is about an ancient who hunted one of the strongest master vampires and when he couldn't defeat him, he sacrificed himself and with the aid of a Carpathian woman,( and no, she wasn't his lifemate) trapped himself and the vampire inside of a volcano. That volcano is about to blow! Tormenta Oscura es sobre un cárpato antiguo (un anciano) que cazó a uno de los maestros vampiros más fuertes. Sin embargo, cuando el antiguo vio que no podía derrotar al vampiro, decidió sacrificarse y, con la ayuda de una de las mujeres cárpatas -que NO es su compañera- se encerró junto con el vampiro en un volcán. Ahora este volcán está a punto de entrar en erupción!!! |
| | | seles Soy sonámbula: Escribo también dormida
Mensajes : 4938 Edad : 34 Localización : Buenos Aires Empleo/Ocios : Estudiante de Klingon Humor : Constantemente... Inscripción : 25/09/2009
| | | | Fantástica Buscando grupo de ayuda
Mensajes : 26861 Edad : 46 Localización : En medio del océano... Empleo/Ocios : Pensar y meditar... Humor : Raro, raro, raro... Inscripción : 21/12/2010
| | | | Haru Psíquica
Mensajes : 155 Edad : 34 Localización : Galaxia 8, planeta 1, 3-A Empleo/Ocios : Proteger el universo Humor : Sí Inscripción : 17/09/2011
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Miér 22 Feb 2012 - 2:20 | |
| - Sasha escribió:
- Pequeña novedad. Hace unos días Feehan posteó esto sobre los protas de Dark Storm:
February 14, 2012
Christine Feehan: Valentine present to everyone. Dark Storm has new hero and new heroine not previously known, although the heroine's ancestor is known. Isn't that a nice present??????
Ahí va un regalo de San Valentín para todas. Tormenta oscura tiene un nuevo héroe y una nueva heroína. A ninguno de ellos los hemos conocido previamente, aunque un ancestro de la protagonista es alguien que sí conocemos.
Dark Storm is about an ancient who hunted one of the strongest master vampires and when he couldn't defeat him, he sacrificed himself and with the aid of a Carpathian woman,( and no, she wasn't his lifemate) trapped himself and the vampire inside of a volcano. That volcano is about to blow!
Tormenta Oscura es sobre un cárpato antiguo (un anciano) que cazó a uno de los maestros vampiros más fuertes. Sin embargo, cuando el antiguo vio que no podía derrotar al vampiro, decidió sacrificarse y, con la ayuda de una de las mujeres cárpatas -que NO es su compañera- se encerró junto con el vampiro en un volcán. Ahora este volcán está a punto de entrar en erupción!!!
Qué maravilla, por fin sabemos algo más del próximo libro. Q ganitas tngo ya de leerlo. Lo del volcán me tiene intrigadita perdida. Suena muy emocionante. Y me encantaría saber de qué familia cárpata procede la mujer protagonista. ¿Podría ser tb de los Dubrisky? ¿De los Dartrazanoff? Y eso de meter a otra compañera (esa q lo ayuda a encerrarse en el volcán) es genial. Qiero saber + de ella tb. Qizá sea la compañera de uno de los cárpatos que ya conocemos. Pero ¿de cual? ¿André? ¿Los trillizos? ¿Y dónde se supone q estará esta mujer cárpata? Tiene q haber estado escondida del pueblo cárpato, como hizo Francesca, ¿no? Jooo, q ganas de saber más. Sasha, muxas gracias por la información. Estás siempre pndiente de darnos las noticias. Igual que con los Inmortales de Kresley Cole. Ahora recuerdo por qé trato d que sigas todas las sagas q leo yo. Si t enteras de algo más, avísanos, x fa. Q algunas no nos manejamos tan bien como tú en eso de encontrar información. |
| | | Eureni Reunión de las Cazadoras en el Templo
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| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Vie 24 Feb 2012 - 0:50 | |
| Bueno chicas!!!!!!!!!!!! Vuelvo de una mudanza exhaustiva y me encuentro con esto!!! Desde que empezo el año he estado revisando dia por dia la web de Feehan y nada, no saben como me alivia esta noticia Ya me estaba preocupando de que esta tia no daba señales de vida con los Carpatos pero bueno, ya puedo respirar, aunque ni tanto. Estaba esperando con tantas ansias el saber quienes serian los protas para el proximo libro ahora que por primera vez en tanto tiempo tenemos a tantos posibles candidatos tanto femeninos como masculinos y ahi va esta tia y me sale con que no conocemos a las protas, o sea que uno mas para la coleccion y de la trama central nada de nada. Ya a estas alturas no se ni por que me sorprendo Pero bueno como iba diciendo, la verdad es que eso del volcan si que parece interesante, pero ahora otro maestro vampiro recontrapoderoso ahi para armar problemas, como si los Malinov no fueran suficientes no me da buena espina, ni tampoco el hecho de que el prota sea un Antiguo, me late que vamos a toparnos con el mismo problema recurrente ya en esta saga y que a estas alturas realmente no quiero ver: el de cual es el Carpato mas poderoso. Quiero decir ya hemos pasado por Mikhail, Gregori, Lucian, Dominic, Zacarias... de verdad, de verdad que no quiero entrar en materia otra vez sobre quien es el mas fuerte que la ultima vez que salio ese temita a colacion se armo la gorda por aca y las malas lenguas enseguida fueron a parar a mi pobre Gregori Pero bueno como sea, eso de que una mujer carpato que no es su compa lo ayudo me suena un monton a Ivory, quiero decir, pensandolo racionalmente es la opcion mas viable, de cuantas mujeres carpatos que vayan por ahi matando vampiros tenemos noticias????? Y ademas para que un antiguo, con lo machistas que son, hubiera confiado en ella con algo tan peligroso como un maestro vampiro, tendria que ser solo dos cosas: 1- Que fuera su compañera. (Que ya aclaramos satisfactoriamente ese punto) 2-Que fuera una asesina condenadamente experta en su trabajo (Lo que sin dudas grita a todas luces: IVORY!!!! No cualquier mujer, Carpato o no, se tira a matar a un vampiro maestro, no mas recuerden a Lara, la chica crecio con la tradicion carpata impregnada en lo mas profundo de ella, lo suficiente como para aceptar voluntariamente a Nicolas cuando este la reconocio como su compa, pero aun asi no podia ver a un vampiro ni en pintura ) Si, a mi entender tiene que ser Ivory Y sobre la chica.... Estoy de acuerdo con Andamo en que no quiero que sea otra hija regada de Razvan, era facil aceptarlo (e incluso desearlo) cuando no conocia al pobre, pero ahora que ya he leido su libro, me daria mucha penita con Ivory y el si fuera el caso, definitivamente NO quisiera que fuese asi, pero con la Feehan, nunca se sabe Por lo demas no tengo ni idea de quien podria ser, ni la mas remota. No creo que sea una Daratrazanoff. Gregori mismo lo dijo, no ha nacido una Daratrazanoff en casi 500 años desde Desari, y dadas las circunstancias y los Daratrazanoff que tenemos ahora, no creo que haya muchas probabilidades, lo mismo va para los Dubrinsky, aunque ya de los Savage no estoy muy segura, podria ser, aunque para eso la chica tendria que ser una carpato, y eso si que no lo veo muy claro Podria ser una jaguar, una hija fugitiva de Rodrick, eso no estaria mal (me gustaria ver a Zacarias en un trocito de su feliz vida como carpato cazado ) Pero bueno como ya dije, con la Feehan nunca se sabe. |
| | | Sasha ¡Llegó tu hora! Sacrificio en el volcán
Mensajes : 8667 Edad : 109 Localización : En el Santuario de Delfos Empleo/Ocios : Oráculo a tiempo parcial Humor : Bipolar: ahora sí, ahora no... Inscripción : 21/07/2009
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Vie 24 Feb 2012 - 9:24 | |
| Bueno, Feehan ha dejado caer alguna que otra cosita... nada muy importante. Aquí os pongo sus últimas perlas: - La protagonista NO es una de las hijas perdidas de Razvan. Esta ha sido una posibilidad muy debatida estos días y ahora la autora descarta completamente esta posibilidad. Habrá que buscar otro posible ancestro que no sea Razvan. Y dejó esté comentario sobre la insistencia de algunas lectoras en cuanto a la relación de Sindyl e Ivory. Por lo visto, Feehan no pretendía que este secreto despertara tanto interés... Christine Feehan :Feb 21, 2012 I think we're getting closer to revealing that information, although I can't honestly say. I never know what tidbit will come out about other characters in these books Creo que nos estamos acercando al momento en el que se revele esa información, aunque yo no puedo estar segura completamente. No sé qué "golosinas" saldrán sobre otros personajes en estos libros.Y sobre la cárpata que ayuda al prota a encerrarse en el volcán, yo creo que podría ser la famosa Flower Lady. El pasado 17 de mayo de 2011, Feehan dijo que OIRÍAMOS hablar más sobre esta misteriosa mujer cárpata... aunque no la VERÍAMOS... Quizá la parte del volcán es narrada como un recuerdo del pasado de manera que la Flower Lady no es un personaje activo sino un recuerdo del prota... así sí que sería posible que fuera ella la que le ayudara a encerrarse... Vamos, que ni ella misma sabe qué va a revelar en este próximo libro. Recordemos que apenas está empezándolo -y ha tenido un poco de retraso por un problema con el teclado del ordenador-. Hay que esperar un poco más para saber más cositas sobre Tormenta oscura... |
| | | Haru Psíquica
Mensajes : 155 Edad : 34 Localización : Galaxia 8, planeta 1, 3-A Empleo/Ocios : Proteger el universo Humor : Sí Inscripción : 17/09/2011
| | | | Eureni Reunión de las Cazadoras en el Templo
Mensajes : 5011 Edad : 30 Localización : Aqui y alla Empleo/Ocios : Aspirante a Escritora Humor : Maaalo, Maaalooooo Inscripción : 19/01/2010
| | | | Sasha ¡Llegó tu hora! Sacrificio en el volcán
Mensajes : 8667 Edad : 109 Localización : En el Santuario de Delfos Empleo/Ocios : Oráculo a tiempo parcial Humor : Bipolar: ahora sí, ahora no... Inscripción : 21/07/2009
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Mar 6 Mar 2012 - 12:56 | |
| Chicas, la portada de Dark Storm... (q, todo sea dicho, no es para tirar cohetes). (Por cierto, me equivoco o hay como un dragón???) Y no sé si lo dije -voy con mucha prisa, sorry- pero el día de publicación es el 4 de septiembre de este año -en inglés, claro. Y el último mensaje de la Feehan: - Spoiler:
03/04/2012 Ah... yes... 'Dark Storm' happened to come up! A few of the details that the 'Queen of Tease' was willing to divulge: 1) we're going to learn lots more about the 'Flower Lady' - she is not the heroine, but we will find out more info about her in the telling of this story; 2) the hero is an Ancient, and the heroine is a human; 3) we will see two characters from previous books, and there was a very strong indication that one of those would be Gary. That was about all she was willing to surrender, despite obvious digs for more! :) But it's a little something to gnaw on until September!
No lo traduzco entero -sin tiempo!!! sorry- pero las ideas fundamentales son: -Vamos a saber más sobre la FLOWER LADY. Ella NO es la heroína pero descubriremos más información sobre ella en este libro. -El héroe es un Anciano. La prota es una humana. -Veremos a dos personajes de libros anteriores y hay muchas posiblidades de que uno de ellos sea Gary. |
| | | Fantástica Buscando grupo de ayuda
Mensajes : 26861 Edad : 46 Localización : En medio del océano... Empleo/Ocios : Pensar y meditar... Humor : Raro, raro, raro... Inscripción : 21/12/2010
| | | | jade Cazadora de élite
Mensajes : 13995 Inscripción : 09/04/2008
| Tema: Re: 23º libro: Tormenta oscura Mar 6 Mar 2012 - 21:52 | |
| Y el próximo libro será la de la carpata que ayudó a este antiguo carpato a este paso yo no sé de dodne se saca esta muejr tantos protagonista y sin cerrar ningun circulo,desde Reunion oscura no sabemos nada de los embarazos que salió ahí tampoco sabemos nada sobre los parasitos de la tierra Feehan cierra algunos circulos, que te estas perdiendo |
| | | Eureni Reunión de las Cazadoras en el Templo
Mensajes : 5011 Edad : 30 Localización : Aqui y alla Empleo/Ocios : Aspirante a Escritora Humor : Maaalo, Maaalooooo Inscripción : 19/01/2010
| | | | seles Soy sonámbula: Escribo también dormida
Mensajes : 4938 Edad : 34 Localización : Buenos Aires Empleo/Ocios : Estudiante de Klingon Humor : Constantemente... Inscripción : 25/09/2009
| | | | Eureni Reunión de las Cazadoras en el Templo
Mensajes : 5011 Edad : 30 Localización : Aqui y alla Empleo/Ocios : Aspirante a Escritora Humor : Maaalo, Maaalooooo Inscripción : 19/01/2010
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| | | | | 23º libro: Tormenta oscura | |
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