Title: An Ivory Fox Mask
Author: Sita Bethel
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: 02/25/2025
Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 78200
Genre: Fantasy, dark, magic/magic-users, mythical creatures, witches, sorcerers, royalty, knights, plague, enemies to lovers, slow burn romance
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Description
After a monster attack to the capital city, Citadel, Sir Liam Bord seeks the witch responsible to bring him to the king for his trial and his punishment. Liam succeeds in capturing the witch, Reynald, a former royal mage whom Liam knew as a squire. Despite his attempts at treating Reynald as a prisoner, as Liam begins to understand Reynaldβs motives, he canβt help but question the very system heβs always supported. The way his heart races every time theyβre near each other only further complicates his missionβ¦Excerpt
An Ivory Fox Mask Sita Bethel Β© 2025 All Rights Reserved Creedβs hooves struck the cobblestone streets as Liam galloped toward the main square of Citadelβs market sector. The horseβs tail and mane were braided with bright blue ribbons. Gold and sapphire beads shimmered as Creedβs tail whipped behind him. The fountain of Saint Margaret gurgled. The dying sunlight dipping below the castleβs parapets stained the water a vivid, fiery orange. All around the sculpture, people fled from the inns, taverns, and companion houses. Their screams circled the square. In the stories, Darius, the demon of vengeance and hunting, attacked Citadel as a great dragon, and Saint Margaret defeated him after being devoured and slicing through his stomach to escape. Liam pulled on Creedβs reins. Dismounting, he dashed down the alley between the Naughty Mare and Candlewick Inn. Liamβs breath echoed along the narrow pathway. He skidded to a halt when he saw three crimson gashes of light burning in the shadows. The darkness moved and shifted, taking shape as the stryx crawled forth, as if from old wet-nurse tales, on four taloned feet. Liam unsheathed his sword, his shield raised to intercept any magical attacks, but the creature only screeched before spreading her wings and charging. The black feathers fluttered around the creature like smoke, her entire body semi-ethereal, a shadow bleeding onto an artistβs canvas. Only the three needle-thin eyes were solidβ¦vulnerable to attacks. She snapped with her dark beak. Angling his sword, Liam thrust the blade toward the creatureβs third eye. The tip plunged forward, hilt-deep. Her body collapsed into a shower of black feathers. Though they tickled as they brushed Liamβs sweat-drenched face, the feathers dissolved into wisps of smoke after settling on the ground. Liam exhaled and smeared the sweat from his forehead with the back of his sword hand. Another screamβa human screamβpulled his attention away from the small victory. He glanced to his right and noticed one of the third-floor windows was open. A woman struggled to get away from the birdlike creature. She leaned half out the window and screamed again. Without hesitating, Liam grabbed the rusted iron ladder fastened to the side of the building as a fire escape and hoisted himself upward. Only a slender catwalk connected the ladder to the other rooms, so Liam hugged the innβs outer wall as he inched closer. βCome out! Thereβs a ledge!β He called to the woman perched on the windowsill. She jerked her head in his direction. Her thick, brown curls danced around her head like streamers as a breeze blew past them. She saw the crest on his blue surcoatβa black stallion and golden scaleβand relief washed over her expression. βSir Bord!β βCome now.β Liam beckoned her out of the hotel room. βIβll fight the creature, but I need you out here where itβs safer.β The woman scurried onto the ledge. Her dress snagged on a stray nail, and she teetered, hands flailing. Liam hooked his arm around her waist and pulled her close. She gripped his shoulders. A blush dusted her cheeks. βSir Bord, you saved me.β His stomach twisted in an uncomfortable knot. As a knight, he was familiar with the expression on the damselβs face and knew heβd need to hurry before she tried to βrewardβ him with a kiss. Despite the danger in letting go, he released his grip on the wall in order to remove her hands from his shoulders. βHold tightly to the wall. Stay here until I clear your room and call you inside.β She nodded as a twitch of disappointment from his subtle rejection contorted the smile on her face. Liam grabbed his sword and dipped into the window. His shield caught the stryxβs claws as she swiped at Liamβs face. Liam sidestepped and parried, dancing around the torn sheets and broken chair as he fought. The stryx opened her mouth and shrieked, lunging for him. Liam saw an opening and pushed his sword into one of the beastβs eyes, twisting like a key clicking home in a lock. Another burst of feathers showered him. He plucked one from his long, coiled hair and dropped it to the floor where it wisped into nothing. Liam stuck his head out the window. βItβs safe now.β The woman scrambled into the room, bowing in appreciation. Liam nodded and then raced out the door and back to the street where more creatures hunted for anyone who hadnβt fled to the church. The blazing sunset burnishing the city a quarter hour ago was now bruising into a wounded red violet. The shadows stretched from each building. As Liam crossed the square, he could hardly tell Creedβs outline from the stryx charging toward his horse. Creed reared, pawing at the stryx with his hooves. The creature paused for a moment, but realizing Creed couldnβt hurt her, she darted forward. Her beak snapped, aiming for Creedβs neck, but Liam managed to wedge himself between them with his shield raised. He pushed the stryx backward and slipped his sword into her right eye slit. Liamβs heavy breathing made his chest rise and fall. His armor was finely crafted mesh, one-third the weight of traditional plate, but heβd been riding and racing all over the city while hunting the stryx, and he felt like hot coals were packed between his shoulders and traps. He wasnβt sure he could fight anymore, but a childβs wail reverberated into the square. Liam pivoted, searching. Around the corner, in front of a bakery, curled a dirty, bruised lad, perhaps eight or nine years old. The shadow creature stalking him wasnβt like the others. She was larger, with four wings and a broader crest. A Matriarch, according to Liamβs studies. A spark of hope flashed in his chest. She shared a bond with the witch who called her flock. If she died, the summoning spell would unravel and all the lesser stryx would vanish. Exhausted as he was, Liam wasnβt sure heβd survive another encounter, but he didnβt have to survive, he only needed to take her with him. Liam sheathed his sword. Stooping low, he snatched a stray stone from a flower bed in front of one of the shop windows and hurled the rock at the back of the creatureβs head. βHey!β he shouted. She spun, screeching. βThatβs right! That childβs hardly a snack! Come get a proper meal!β Liam splayed his arms wide, inviting the creature to attack him. He didnβt bother drawing his sword again. His arms trembled from exertion. He no longer had enough strength to wield his blade with the finesse needed to hit the hair-thin mark of her eyes. Her talons clanked against the cobblestone as she trotted toward him, gaining speed when he didnβt try to attack. He waited until the gap between her and the child was sufficient before pulling a small throwing dagger from inside his glove and flinging it into her eye. Miss. She turned her head half an inch, and it was enough for the blade to zip past her and bounce off the brick bakery.Purchase
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Meet the Author
Hey there, readers. Itβs me, ya boi, Sita Bethel. And this is a biography where I tell you all the boring facts about my life- like how I have a degree in writing, and how my two cats, Odin and Anpu, will one day rule this land as your feline overlords. Enough of that same old, same old. Hereβs the real dirt. Sita Bethel likes to wrap up like a burrito with a weighted blanket. They host coloring parties as a personal eff-you to anxiety, and read everything from trash British sensationalist novels like The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins to literary masterpieces like The Color Purple by Alice Walker. Had enough of Sita Bethel yet? If not, check out @sita_bethel on Twitter, or sitabethelfiction on Facebook, or even http://www.sitabethel.com.Website | Facebook | Twitter
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