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Can she save the vampire that wants to possess her? Bash, a four-hundred-year-old vampire, doesn’t want a mate. He believes he doesn’t deserve to be blessed with a woman to Bond with him. His past is traumatic, and he does everything to push the memories deep within him. He has a mission; to rid the world of the men that harm others. That is his only mission. Marie is human but has known of the world of shifters and vampires since she worked in a nightclub that three panthers owned. She dated a shifter that ended before it started, leaving her wishing for someone to love even more. Marie hides her true self with silence and baggy clothes, hoping someday she will find someone that will look past what they see on the outside and delve deeper. Bash struggles to keep his solitary life despite his friend and maker, Ryker’s, attempts to bring him into the light. His denial is swift when he meets Marie, but he can’t deny the desire to be near her. Marie sees Bash, her dark angel, not just his beauty but the pain and longing he tries to hide. Will Marie save him from a life that is immersed in the past? Can Marie’s quiet strength be enough to save her vampire? She will have to fight, not only for Bash’s love but also to stop the person that wants her, whether she is willing or not. When Marie looked into his unusual eyes, she found another purpose; to prove to him that the universe didn’t make mistakes. Saving Her Vampire is the fourth book in the Embracing The Bond Series, a stand-alone, vampire, steamy, paranormal romance. Due to explicit language, graphic sexual scenes, and violence, this book is intended for mature (18 years +) readers.
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Like the other books in this series, the story is really good. This book had issues like the others with the flow and the dialogue as well as punctuation and some words missing spaces between them.
And I had a bit of a problem with Marie. There are moments in the book where she acts without really thinking. I understand that they are stressful moments and that's the point, to have her act without thinking. However, when she is contacted and told that Bash has been captured, rather than trying to call him or Ryker, who would have been with Bash at the time, she just runs off, alone, to try and save Bash. She could have even waited for Bishop to get back with their food and said something to him.
Bash, on the other hand, was more fun. I could understand his reasoning for the way he was and I did not miss the parallels between him and the main conflict. Both had a very similar childhood and lifestyle. It's something that is never brought up in the book and was more just like a hint at what Bash could have become.
I am excited for the next book in series. Bishop will finally be front and center and he's paired with the person I thought he might be. And now it explains why he questions her scent toward the end. I cannot wait to see how their story unfolds. But that will be a while.