The pursuit of a serial killer leads to a deeper evil. When the government captures a vampire, he is imprisoned and subjected to brutal medical experiments. With the project's original MD dead, a rookie from the clinic downstairs is brought in as a replacement. As the procedures become more gruesome, Dr. Joe McKay is torn between sympathy for a patient's suffering and concern for the evil that threatens to consume everyone involved. Ultimately, McKay discovers that the real evil isn't the thousand year old vampire but the Delphi Project itself. When it is discovered that he carries the rare gene believed to cause vampirism, the young Doctor is sentenced to a life of confinement and torturous experiments. His only hope to expose the Project and insure his safety is Simon Molinar. But once the vampire has his long sought after companion, will he ever let him go?
I'm a writer, filmmaker, publisher, manga editor, cancer survivor and amateur chef doing my thing in Los Angeles. I write genre erotica (sci-fi, fantasy, yaoi) often with bdsm themes. I read almost everything.
I owe the author an apology for a disastrous review. I thought I was being delightful and I was being a jerk. My enjoyment of this book is connected with the great fanfiction that features the character (not quite the right way to say it) played by Garrett Maggart (Blair from The Sentinel and Dr. McKay in Demon Under Glass movie version).
The book is an engaging story of a doctor who selflessly helps the vampire who kidnaps and falls in love with him. It's written in a very economical way, being adapted from a script that lets your imagination yearn for what isn't being said. It delivers "the chase" between one male desiring another that I love so much. I love that Dr. McKay isn't keen on giving in just because he has a good heart. That part made it a compelling read for me. Please forgive me, Mrs. Warner, for the insensitive things I said in the heat of the excitement of this story. Whay lay between the pages of this book, what you hinted at but didn't say, blew my mind.