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The Incubus's Fertile Bargain (eBook)
The Incubus's Fertile Bargain | |
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![]() The Incubus's Fertile Bargain eBook Cover, written by Jade Silva | |
Author(s) | Jade Silva |
Publisher | Smashwords |
Publication date | January 17, 2020 |
Media type | eBook |
Length | 7 Pages |
ISBN | 9780463496251 |
For other uses of the word Incubus, see Incubus (disambiguation).
The Incubus's Fertile Bargain is an eBook written by Jade Silva. In this work one of the characters is an Incubus.
Overview
- Title: The Incubus's Fertile Bargain
- Author: Jade Silva
- Published By: Smashwords
- Length: 7 Pages
- Format: eBook
- IBSN: 9780463496251
- Publishing Date: January 17, 2020
Plot Summary
The witch Cara is so desperate to awaken her magical potential that she's ready to sell her soul to a demon to make it happen. But the incubus she summons has an alternate proposal for the fertile witch. When he asks Cara to offer up her body instead, will she be able to handle the demon as he takes her without protection?
Book Review
The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on February 18, 2020
Cara just can’t make magic work for her. A deal with a devil seems to be her only chance, but there are so many evil ones. An image of an incubus catches her thoughts and she tries to summon one. But what she finds is that the summoning works, but everything else turns out nothing like she expected.
The work is a very short, what I call a pamphlet, piece of erotica which, after the summoning, turns towards a pregnancy fetish story for the most part. It’s very fast paced, there is little time for the main character to gather her wits and the incubus takes over entirely once the deal is made. The erotica has tepid heat for the most part, mainly the incubus taking Cara as he wishes and then disappearing when he knows what he wanted is done.
The incubus of the work, who is never given a name, is quite seductive and teasing at the beginning. As the story unfolds, his more dominant nature takes over all else. He’s not stereotpyically evil, he’s more sex focused than anything else.
Two and a half out of five pitchforks.
It always bothers me when the succubi or incubi of a story are never given a name. It takes away something, a reason to care about them or want to know more. The work ends in something of a promise and a question, it’s actually an interesting one. It’s that mainly as to what the result of what has happened, and what might be, could be. It’s a shame that the story didn’t explore things further in that.