
I have to admit I'm a little taken aback by how I'm feeling about this story. I'm feeling a little out of sorts right now. Will I read this again in the future? - No.

Would I recommend this book/series? - No. Would I read more by this author/or of series? - I just keep coming back to Mary Calmes. Series: - Series (Standalone?), Book One (Short Story) Genre: - (Adult) Paranormal Romance (M/M) Point we’ll have to figure out how I managed to have gargoyle “Seeing is believing.” I gestured at him. “How do you simply accept this new truth of our God, me and insta-love does not get along. I feel like Mary Calmes' stories goes like this: “Well, hello.” “Hi, we're mates.” “Really?” “Yes, you're mine.” “I'm yours.” “I love you.” “I love you, too.” Awesome. Overall, the story is a story of insta-love and apparently not freaking out when it turns out your lover is a gargoyle - Mace just smiled. Luc's not human, he's a goji-gargoyle, and apparently Mace has goji blood in him and he is a Romanus (a seer). Even though he's so tired he could fall asleep standing, he just want to look at Luc. Mason “Mace' James and Luc Toussaint met, and Mace is totally mesmerized by the man. This is a quick read for readers who are in the mood for alpha possessiveness, hot sex, and gargoyles! Still think gargoyles were cool, loved how Tremblay did their accents (think French)! Oh la la! I am happy for the sequel because there were a few questions I had that I wanted answered three years ago when I originally read Romanus - who were Mason's parents? what can a Romanus do? what will happen with a gargoyle/human pairing (secondary characters)?

I had the same feels for the plot twists - couldn't stand the jealous supposed friend and the 'action'/kidnapping plot was a little out there. So much so, I'm bumping up my rating to 3.75 Hearts because the narration was a 4 Heart job.the story was basically the same, so I'm not going to get rating crazy. I could visualize every action and he made it better. He did the accents, he really narrated the hell out of a 3.5 star book for me. Now I see the difference great narration does for a book.
