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      Praise for the novels of Jennifer Armintrout

      “Every character is drawn in vivid detail, driving the action from point to point in a way that never lets up.”

      —The Eternal Night on The Turning

      “[Armintrout’s] use of description varies between chilling, beautiful, and disturbing…[a] unique take on vampires.”

      —The Romance Readers Connection

      “Armintrout continues her Blood Ties series with style and verve, taking the reader to a completely convincing but alien world where anything can—and does—happen.”

      —Romantic Times BOOKreviews on Possession

      “The relationships between the characters are complicated and layered in ways that many authors don’t bother with.”

      —Vampire Genre on Possession

      “[This book] will stun readers. Not to be missed.”

      —The Romance Readers Connection

       on Ashes to Ashes

      “Entertaining and often steamy romances run parallel to the supernatural action without dominating the pages.”

      —Darque Reviews on All Soul’s Night

      “Armintrout pulls out all the stops…a bloody good read.”

      —Romantic Times BOOKreviews

       on All Souls’ Night

      Books by Jennifer Armintrout

      Blood Ties

      BOOK ONE: THE TURNING

      BOOK TWO: POSSESSION

      BOOK THREE: ASHES TO ASHES

      BOOK FOUR: ALL SOULS’ NIGHT

      The Lightworld/Darkworld novels

      QUEENE OF LIGHT

      CHILD OF DARKNESS

      and

      VEIL OF SHADOWS

      Available December 2009

      JENNIFER ARMINTROUT

      CHILD OF DARKNESS

      A LIGHTWORLD/DARKWORLD NOVEL

      This book is dedicated to Tez Miller.

       Not just because she won the Twitter contest and this was the prize, but also because she is one of the nicest romance bloggers I have met.

      Contents

      Prologue

      Chapter One

      Chapter Two

      Chapter Three

      Chapter Four

      Chapter Five

      Chapter Six

      Chapter Seven

      Chapter Eight

      Chapter Nine

      Chapter Ten

      Chapter Eleven

      Chapter Twelve

      Chapter Thirteen

      Chapter Fourteen

      Chapter Fifteen

      Chapter Sixteen

      Chapter Seventeen

      Chapter Eighteen

      Chapter Nineteen

      Chapter Twenty

      Acknowledgments

      Prologue

      On the night she was born, the Palace rejoiced.

      But her mother did not.

      Lying in her bed, the infant tucked closely to her side, Ayla despaired. Protect her, the Goddess had said. It had been so easy when the child had been a part of her. Now, she was a part of the world, a world that was more cruel and difficult than one of her race should have to face. Protecting her would not be as simple now.

      The child was perfect, though more Human in appearance than even her mother. Faery babes were born pale, tinged with green, and spindly like the roots of a plant. This child was plump and pink, with a shock of flame-orange hair sprouting in tufts from her head. Two feathered, black wings were tucked against her small back, and they stirred as she slept, as though she dreamed of a day when she could use them.

      The door to the Queene’s chambers opened to admit the child’s father. Malachi, once divine, now mortal. He approached carefully, as though afraid to see what lay beside Ayla in the bed.

      “She is…whole?” He had voiced his fears to Ayla only once, late at night, when he’d recounted for her the sights of the pitiful children he’d had to escort to Aether, the domain of the Angels on Earth. He had been afraid that the child would be malformed, as a punishment for his fall.

      It relieved Ayla that she was able to show him how foolish that fear had been. “She is whole.” She hesitated. “But her wings…they are the same as yours. Everyone will know she is not Garret’s child.”

      Emboldened by the news that his child was not deformed as a consequence of his actions, he came forward to see her. “I am glad they will know. I would not care if that traitor’s name was never uttered in the Palace again.”

      Ayla stroked the downy skin between her daughter’s wings. “No. No one must ever know. To keep her safe.”

      “It would be safer for her to be thought of as a bastard,” he argued, and Ayla could not be surprised. She’d thought of it, herself.

      “It would be. She would never be Queene, and so, she would never be a target for an Assassin’s blade. As heir to my throne, she will be,” Ayla mused aloud, as if thinking of it for the first time. “But if she were revealed to be a bastard, her inheritance of my throne might be compromised.”

      “Your throne,” Malachi repeated. The words sounded like poison he needed to spit from his mouth.

      Ayla did not bristle, as she used to. Over the months since her coronation, it had become clearer and clearer to her that while Malachi loved her and would stay at her side in the Lightworld, he hated the Faery Court. She’d feared, for a time, that it was her he hated, that he stayed in the Lightworld simply because he had nowhere else to go. But she had resolved to tolerate it, because she’d caused him to lose his immortality, and the kind Human who’d saved his life had died because of her.

      It had only been when Cedric, her closest advisor, had politely suggested the real reason for Malachi’s hatred of her position—that it kept her from him, in all but the physical sense—that it had become clear. And now, she felt foolish at the mere memory of those fears.

      “I do not worry for myself. Or, perhaps I do. If the child is known to not be Garret’s, those who wished to remove me from the Court could use it against me. If I were officially declared a traitor, think of what might happen to her.” Speaking of death aloud, in this room where Queene Mabb had fallen under Garret’s hand, sent a ripple of apprehension through her, as if her own death brushed over her on its way to the future. “No, it would be safer for her to be thought of as the heir to the throne, and endangered in that way, than to be cast on the mercy of the Court and be subject to their machinations.”

      She pulled the blanket over the child—her daughter, how strange to think those words!—so that her form was obscured. “Bring Cedric. I need his counsel.”

      Malachi’s fists clenched at his sides. She knew his feelings for her advisor. Malachi wished to be the closest to her,

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