(Short story length)
After her students get her discredited, and she loses her teaching job and her boyfriend, Madison sets sail in a rental boat to find a rumored new kind of dolphin. But instead, she is visited by a merman. Rubec has been given a quest by a blue whale. In order to rid himself of his mate bond to his treacherous and now dead mermaid mate, he must seduce and kill a human woman. If he doesn’t, he will wither away because of the despair from the mate bond with his mate no longer living.
I love the idea of these books starring a merman instead of the stereotypical mermaid. After reading The Merman’s Kiss (Book 1) and A Mermaid’s Heart (Book 3), I was really looking forward to this book. I was looking forward to following Rubec as he descended into the abyss in a robotic mindless despair toward certain death (mentioned in both of the other two books), into the great unknown and seeing just what sort of world and thrills awaited in the darkness, and see exactly what snapped him back into acting like a normal thinking person again. But rather than that book, this book skipped all of that and started with Madison on her boat and him appearing along side it, with his quest already in hand, that according to him he got from a whale??? (I’d really like to know how he got it, and what exactly the whale told him). Rubec sees auras and can tell what sort of person Madison is because of her aura and what she’s feeling??? Auras weren’t mentioned in either of the other books. So why can he see auras, but not either of the other mer characters in the other two books? Not to mention that it felt like cutting corners rather than him not knowing how she’s feeling or what sort of person she is and has to figure it out and discover things about her. Also, how does he just know her language??? In The Merman’s Kiss, the merman kissed the woman and accidentally started the mate bond with her, and because their bond was stronger, it also resulted in telepathy between the two characters. In A Mermaid’s Heart, the human man slowly taught the mermaid sign language. This book is a straight erotic with not much else happening between sex scenes. In the other books we had the underwater world of the Mer people brought to life in rich detail, but this story is set almost exclusively onboard Madison’s boat. It is an interesting relationship as Madison wrestles with being thrilled that she’s come face to face with a new creature and can use finding him to save her career, not to mention the thrill of learning about him, versus her lust for him. While he’s at war with himself over using Madison to cure himself of the mate bond, and realizing that he might actually want her rather than using her. But Rubec is rather one-dimensional and self-centered. Not once does he consider Ebby, his child that he left behind.