The debt was supposed to be a myth. The monster standing in my living room is terrifyingly real.
Dr. Amara Freeman deals in history, not folklore. When she returns to the Lowcountry to settle her grandmother’s estate, she expects dust, humidity, and memories. She doesn’t expect a supernatural blizzard that seals off the island, trapping her inside the ancestral Haint Blue cabin.
And she certainly doesn’t expect him.
Kaspar is immense, ash-skinned, and horned—a creature of ancient winter and brutal instinct. He calls himself the Guardian, the Krampus, the collector of the Solstice Debt. According to a contract signed in blood generations ago, Amara’s family owes him a life to keep the darkness at bay.
And the payment is Amara.
Trapped by snow and stalked by the town’s dark secrets, Amara’s body betrays her. The Solstice Fever strikes—a biological inferno that marks her as a Prime Omega. She is burning alive from the inside out, and Kaspar’s touch of absolute zero is the only thing that can soothe the agony.
He demands her submission. He demands to take her to his frozen Nether realm as his queen. But as the heat between them turns into a storm that rivals the one outside, Amara realizes she isn’t just a sacrifice. She is the storm that can bring the winter king to his knees.
The debt is due. But Amara isn’t paying with her life. She’s paying with her heart.
HAINT BLUE WINTER is a Dark BWWM Krampus Omegaverse Romance. It features a cynical historian heroine, a possessive monster hero who literally cools her heat, and a heavy dose of Gullah Geechee folklore.
I tried. I truly did, but the story is drowning in smilies, metaphors, and allegories. The characters are beyond superficial, and I don’t know. She keeps referring to herself as a historian, and I promise you historians do not walk around announcing it like that, and the sex scene was anything but. If there was supposed to be a dark part, it must be that this entire story is about perimenopause. That’s the huge take away. She needed someone to help her with her hot flashes.
Loved the premise but was too repetitively descriptive . Neither character had any depth, sex scene was super blah . No heat or attraction between the two.