Ratings2
Average rating4
Like a songbird in a cage, Anya has spent her entire life as the General's perfect daughter. He snaps his fingers, she jumps. He tells her to smile, she beams like she is made of the sun itself. But underneath all those games and glitter, she's working to destroy her father and save the city she loves.When an undine sneaks his way into her city, intent on kidnapping her, she lets him take her.Daios is plagued by the decisions of his past. Souls haunt him, memories follow his every move, and all he knows is that perhaps stealing this woman will absolve him of his sins. If he can bring her back to his people, then they can destroy the city where his hatred was born. He's certain this will be easy. But then he sees the General's daughter, and he knows nothing will ever be the same again.Broken and damaged, he's certain no woman will ever love him. He shouldn't even try to encourage the mating instincts that ride him hard the moment he sees her.But when he realizes that she's the same as he is, different from her people and on the outskirts of what others deem "normal", he knows he's a goner. Even if it means he has to risk everything to keep her.
Featured Series
2 primary booksDeep Waters is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2019 with contributions by Emma Hamm and L.G. Davis.
Reviews with the most likes.
Characters: Daios and Anya
Daios wants to destroy Alpha and the other underground glass houses the humans live in. He and the others advise a plan to kidnap the generals daughter (Anya) so they try to take down the glass houses.
Anya is miserable living under her father’s thumb, she had become deaf due to an explosion years ago. One day she sees a undine in the pool, she’s curious about him and swims closer to him. Then he starts showing up more frequently and she wants to know more about him.
He gets discovered by the cameras and then her home becomes a prison. She gets to the point where she escapes in the pipes and Daios rescues her.
I really enjoyed this, but not as much as the first book, Daios very much dealt with a lot of guilt from some of his people getting killed on a raid of Beta from the first book, and Anya has been treated horribly by her father for years (even smacking her). It did make me a bit sad, hence why I had to give the book a 4 star instead.