Download PDF Dark Need (Dark Romance) (House Of Sin Book 3) By Clarissa Wild
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Ebook About In the middle of the night he took me. Dangerous and wild, I only know him as Soren.My captor, my tormentor.He forces me to walk miles on end and refuses to tell me why.All he does is stare …And it sets my body on fire.He’s a muscular giant with raw, unbridled needs.If I run, he’ll catch me.If I fight, he’ll pin me down.And worst of all … I’m beginning to like it.But what I fear the most is that he lives for it.Everyone knows a beast can’t be chained.One way or another … his darkest needs will always come out to play. Dark Need is a Dark Romance novel by New York Times & USA Today Bestselling Author Clarissa Wild. This story follows Soren & April from Dark Wish & Dark Lies. However, it can also be read as a standalone.Book Dark Need (Dark Romance) (House Of Sin Book 3) Review :
It Has You On The Edge Of Your Seat Throughout, Trying To Unwrap What Exactly Is Taking Place. It Is An Intense Read, A Thriller Set In A Mysterious World Steeped In Some Extreme Religious Notions. The Truth Is Unclear As Good & Evil Are Painted In Shades Of Grey.This is book three of the House of Sin series, which is a spinoff of His duet. Both center around cults.The House is a place where sinners are sent, sometimes even by their own choice, for punishment. It is an alternative to jail or death, one that offers redemption. The people that run the House serve a higher power. The goal is for their captives to admit to their sins and earn redemption. The House has stood as an alternate form of punishment for the wealthy and connected for decades. The torch is passed down through the generations. The punishers must sin in order to punish, so they in effect take on the sins of their captives. They, too, must suffer punishments as a consequence. It is an emotionally and physically draining job, but those that run it are born into the life. They believe in the cause and know no other way. There is a book that lays out all the rules, which are followed meticulously for the protection of all. For some, the punishment is more psychological. Others require punishment in the bedroom, and yet others require the kind of punishment that is only satisfied by old fashioned torture.The House can be seen from different viewpoints. Most guests choose to be there and appreciate that they have it as an option. But it is not an easy life for punishers, who are chained to the House for life and bound by its strict rules. Amelia thinks Eli and his staff are monsters, but those closest don’t see it that way. They see it as a place that offers sinners atonement and a second chance.This book can be read perfectly as a standalone, but it would be better appreciated having first read the related books. The series thus far includes:1. Dark Wish (Eli and Amelia’s story, part 1)2. Dark Lies (Eli and Amelia’s story, part 2)3. Dark Need (Soren and April’s story)While this series can be read independently, fans of His duet (Under His Rule and Beyond His Control) will be thrilled with this new story. It is recommended, though not necessary, to read His duet prior to this series. That duet is Noah and Natalie’s story and centers around the Family, a cult that lives in a place referred to as the Holy Land. In His duet, Natalie befriends April while in the Family’s Holy Land. April had a very minor role. As the duet comes to a close, April remains missing without a trace. She shows up in this new series in a minor role in books one and two. April finally gets her own story with Soren (who is introduced in Dark Wish) in this book.For those that have read His duet, there are many parallels between that and Eli and Amelia’s story in the first two books of the House of Sin series. The couple had met or known one another in their youth, making a lasting impression on the boy. As the boy grows into a man, he seeks out the girl and eventually finds her, bringing her back to his home. In His duet the home is in a cult; in House of Sin the home serves a dark religious purpose, serving a number of cults. In both stories the woman escapes, and both men must come to terms with the life they were brought up to live. Each is in a position of leadership and faces political obstacles. They spend a great deal of time studying their books. Nevertheless, these are entirely separate stories set in the same world. A fan of His duet should absolutely enjoy House of Sin.FROM DARK WISH, BOOK ONE:Amelia, twenty-three, loves books. She is intelligent and hard-working, yet has a big heart and innocent outlook on life. She dreams of bigger things while complacently accepting her status quo. She works part-time at the library – her dream job – but it doesn’t pay the bills. With the pressure of student loan payments, she must resort to a second job unless or until a full-time position at the library comes along. She might be shy, but she is determined to make her own way in life even if that means working as a cocktail waitress at a strip club. She can mostly handle herself on the job, though the customers at Joe’s Hotties sometimes do get a little handsy. She lives with her boyfriend Chris, whom she doesn’t get to see much of with all her evening shifts. He keeps busy with his own job too, and finding time for one another is a challenge. When a strange man starts appearing in her life, the coincidences are suspicious and yet Amelia cannot shrug the magnetic pull she feels for the stranger. She dreams of being romanced in spite of her concerns.Eli, about thirty, is following in his father’s footsteps. He grew up in a private and luxurious lifestyle where he had been homeschooled his entire life. His mother passed when he was a teen, leaving him conflicted. She had never really wanted him, but his father was always away for days at a time. The influential people that frequently visited their home made his father an eminently powerful man. The family business had been handed down for generations, and as a child Eli eagerly looked forward to stepping into his father’s shoes and learning about their mysterious business. It is divine work, so there is no shame in what they do. The House of Sin is a special place where sinners earn their freedom. The price of freedom is sometimes daunting, and some might consider the House a prison. Pain and punishment are part of the experience. In a carefully controlled environment, punishers work for the greater good by bending morals and ethics. They serve a special function in society. There are many rules to follow, which keep the punisher in line as he doles out humility, hoping to earn a confession. Lust is used as a tool – frequently – but the punisher can never be ruled by it without falling into sin himself. Walking the line is a difficult task, but it was what Eli was born for.When a girl on the sidewalk makes Eli do a double take, the course of his future is altered. He is entranced by her beauty and innocence. Determined to have her for himself, he decides to make it happen. But business just isn’t done this way, and it requires bending some rules. Fortunately for him, everyone is a sinner. He will watch, judge, and punish Amelia. He isn’t supposed to intervene, but his sense of self-control around her is put to the test. When he asks what her darkest desire is, her answer takes him by surprise. His obsession with her will certainly break him – maybe even before he breaks her. Their story ends in a cliffhanger and continues in book two, Dark Lies.FROM DARK LIES, BOOK TWO:As book one closes, Eli has finally helped Amelia recover her memory of the night of her birthday. Unlike most at the House of Sin, she had been taken against her will for a crime that she didn’t remember – and the nature of her crime remained unknown to her. She had believed that her kidnapping was just a mind game meant to keep her complacent and tucked away as Eli’s personal toy. Everything changes in a heartbeat when her memories return, though, as Amelia begins to understand that she had truly belonged in the House of Sin. She is a sinner, and her crime was heinous. Eli had put the House at risk by bringing her in the way that he did, but he knew no other way. He had to have the angel. Since everyone is a sinner, it only took him patiently waiting and watching for him to snatch her up at the appropriate time. He hadn’t understood her or known her experiences well enough to judge her reactions, though, and things had gone further than he planned. But with Amelia’s memories recovered, she has earned her freedom. She goes to Eli willingly.This story opens with Amelia catching on to the fact that Eli had probably played a role in that fateful evening. With all trust shattered, she escapes the island with the hope of returning home to find answers. Her journey is not easy, and Eli is mad with worry about her safety after discovering she left. He is determined to bring her back. Insisting she is the one, his choice, he hastily decides to make his vow that Amelia will become his wife and continue the family line. It is the greatest vow that the man in charge of the House takes, and he must keep it. Tobias, his assistant and advisor, continues to discourage Eli about Amelia and the vow, insisting it will bring everything down. Despite that fact that Tobias, too, has developed feelings for one of their former guests, Anna, he steadfastly stands by the rules. Tensions between Eli and Tobias rise, but Eli insists he will go after Amelia himself and bring her home.Amelia denies her feelings for Eli as he struggles to come to terms with the situation. He is a punisher, and the punisher’s job is mentally taxing. The punisher sins when punishing, so he in essence bares the sins of the sinners he punishes, and his back has the scars to prove it. The physical and mental toll requires immense focus and control. Hence the need for the book of rules for the House. Eli studies the rules hoping to find a way to forward, but without Amelia’s love he may just run out of options. The couple eventually earns a happy ending.IN THIS BOOK:April, probably in her early to mid-twenties, finds herself a prisoner in the House of Sin, an establishment run for the purpose of punishing those who sin. The problem is that she doesn’t belong there. She hasn’t done anything wrong. She had made a promise with her boyfriend Eric to remain pure until marriage, but a nasty breakup left her looking for answers from above. Emotionally vulnerable, she went to one of the meetings held by the Family, a group rumored to be a cult, but kept an open mind. The ad promised healing through God’s love – exactly what she needed. When she tentatively agreed to pledge herself to the group, everything suddenly changed. She was immediately whisked away from her home, her job, and her freedom. That was months ago.She had met and befriended a fellow prisoner taken from the outside world when she was held in the Holy Land by the Family. She felt betrayed by her friend Natalie, however, who agreed to sit at one of the leader’s side. Noah held a position of power, and the actions of the group could not be excused. The men held all the power, and the women were merely there to be picked and married off. Unlike Natalie, April never bent to their will. She was determined to remain pure. And since refusing marriage was not deemed acceptable, she was eventually sent away for punishment. Because she had been taken and kept against her own will and was being forced into a marriage she did not agree to, April knew she had done nothing wrong. It had been the Family that was at fault. Nevertheless, April found herself a prisoner at yet another cult-like place: the House.The House is run by Eli, who inherited the lucrative job from his father. His advisor Tobias assists with punishments and helps Eli run the House according to the written rules. Tobias also inherited his role from his father. Soren is the quiet one of the three, and his responsibilities lie in the dungeon. He was sent years ago by the Vikholm people, who have supplied the House with a punisher for generations.There is one man at the House that terrifies April. Soren’s uncivilized table manners are one thing, but the way he looks at her is another altogether. He looks like he wants to eat her alive. He has a broody demeanor in general and is prone to moodiness. He barely speaks other than to grunt, and his giant-like size only adds to the intimidation she feels in his presence. His eyes almost never leave hers. Although in the weeks that pass April hasn’t really received any punishment, and the House itself feels almost like a luxury hotel, sitting through a meal while seated across from Soren is pure torture. So when he comes to her in the middle of the night and tells her she must follow him, refusing to say where he is taking her, escaping the confines of the House doesn’t exactly feel like freedom.Soren has had the privilege of working for Eli at the House for years. It is an honorable job to be a punisher, and Soren’s job is to punish those beyond relief. He loves the satisfaction of seeing his subjects suffer, and he never considers caving to their pleas for mercy. Not even for the occasional woman he tortures. Soren was trained to be a warrior from his youth, on his small island home in Scandinavia. The primitive and remote island is governed by elders, and he was amongst those chosen for the honor of becoming a warrior. He knows to follow orders without question. It is not his job to judge. He doesn’t care what his subjects have or have not done. He simply tortures those sent to him without mercy. Eli is a good owner, and he makes Soren feel valued, something he isn’t used to but feels good. He was not raised to have emotions, so they are foreign to him.The first time Soren laid eyes on April, he knew she would be his undoing. He has been caged his entire adult life, and she makes him feel desire. But a good warrior only follows orders, eventually to return home honorably for his reward. Soren will not bring dishonor to himself or his people. Physical pain from punishment is nothing to him, but honor is everything. So when Eli comes to him with a problem, Soren isn’t happy. Eli is struggling with the sin he carries, and in a sudden act of atonement, he sets the captives free, returning them to their homes. But one captive poses a threat to the house. April is not a sinner; she had been sent to them by the Family, but had been taken against her will. Returning her home thus poses a security risk to the House. Eli assigns Soren to personally escort her to a secret location, putting Soren face to face with temptation.Soren and April set off on a journey as enemies. The tension is thick and trust is lacking. Their journey binds them, though. No matter how it ends, it will end badly for one of them. But the bond they grudgingly forge has them feeling bound by honor or duty or guilt – or perhaps love. They eventually each feel responsible for the other’s well-being. And they each will have a choice as to how far they are willing to go for the other. Their choices will lead them to understand what drives them together and what motivates them to put everything on the line for one another. The couple eventually wins a hard fought HEA.Wow! This story does an amazing job of humanizing Soren, a man raised to torture for a living. April’s story does a wonderful job of bringing other books into the mix. Noah and Natalie make an appearance, as do Eli and Amelia. But it is Soren’s story that slowly grabs you unawares. It is emotional and heartbreaking, and seeing him find happiness with April is the ultimate achievement. He never knew desire, compassion, affection, or love until he met her. She introduces him to a brand new world, one filled with the kind of pain that any emotional being experiences. He has many firsts with her, and her purity and steadfastness are a perfect match for him. Though raised in violence, he too lives by honor and dedication. But he was not raised to think critically or to feel emotion, so he must go through a huge transformation before any kind of happy ending is remotely possible. It is an emotional journey with many obstacles along the way.Soren and April finally get their story, and it is an emotional treat. It is about honor and forgiveness. It is about learning what it is to love. Their journey through the wilderness tests them both, but it ultimately brings them together. Ironically, April senses Soren’s pain. The compassion she shows him confuses him. He tries to follow the honorable path, but finds himself conflicted at times. He is finally forced to interact with a prisoner whose safety is his duty, and without Eli or Tobias to give orders, Soren must make decisions on his own for once. Soren had been a mindless servant until April came along, and for her he was willing to break the rules – sometimes. In that position, he learns that doing the right thing occasionally comes with a price.There are a few issues that merit mention. First, some of the timelines, particularly towards the end, don’t feel quite right. For example, April drives a few days to traverse the distance that she and Soren walked in a few days. There are other travel times that don’t feel accurate. There are also some dangers that are somewhat political in nature near the end of the book that resolve a little on the convenient side. As for April’s home, like Natalie’s, it felt odd that it sat waiting for her for several months; one might have anticipated a foreclosure or eviction. Nevertheless, these issues don’t ruin the overall story.Soren and April’s story has you on the edge of your seat throughout, trying to unwrap what exactly is taking place. It is an intense read. Soren is all-powerful, full of rage and lust. He also has a tender side that appears here. The story is a thriller set in a mysterious world steeped in some extreme religious notions. The truth is unclear as good and evil are painted in shades of grey. The story is nicely written. It is complex and plot-driven. The storyline pulls you into the story. The characters are fascinating and unique. Soren’s transformation is incredible. His selflessness might trigger a few tears. It is written in first person. The POV alternates between Soren and April. I rate this book 4.5 stars.I received an advance copy of this book and am voluntarily leaving a review. I fanned myself at the erotic parts; I cried at others, and I loved the story overall. I’m definitely going to be reading this book and possibly buying a print copy in the future. It was that good! One thing that helped was that I was looking forward to it for months and the author was letting little snippets out in increments. It just built up the anticipation. Clarissa Wild delivered an amazing story that was Soren and April. I loved how Soren was so animalistic in his violence to protect April and in his lust to ravage her. And it was so touching and heartbreaking when they were sacrificing themselves for each other even though they thought it would mean their own death. And then the woman elders on the island finally deciding that when April admits that she loves Soren it’s enough to let them go and not kill them for their ultimate sin.It’s so tugged at my heart strings when Soren found out that April was pregnant with his child, and he growled mine, like an animal trying to protect its young, and protect the woman that he loves. 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