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Rainbows in Your Eyes

Andrew Dorincourt has the blood of powerful shifters in his veins. It’s his job to take care of his siblings, who are his pack, and he has no intention of letting anything get in the way. However, he’s seen the love shared not only by his parents but by the Papas, the men who raised his mother, and he wants that for himself. The problem is none of the young women he’s dated have left him wanting anything more than to go home alone. Perhaps he’d have more success by dating men, as his brother does. Only it seems he’s not very successful at that, either.<br><br>Da’ric is the son of Ric’u, a Brachi who’d been stranded on Terra for decades, and David Knight, an ichthyologist who traveled up the Amazon in search of his heart’s desire. Seeing the deep love his fathers have for each other, Da’ric determines to settle for nothing less. At any rate, the dating pool is pretty much empty in the Lagoon of Dreams, and so he goes to the States, where he intends to become a herpetologist. In order to do that, he must mingle with normals, Terrans who have no idea extraterrestrials share the planet with them. When he walks among Terrans, he must disguise his heritage by wearing sunglasses to conceal his rainbow-colored eyes and long-sleeved shirts to hide his scale-patterned skin.<br><br>After being kidnapped and sold to a high-ranking member of the London underworld to be displayed as the Snake Boy, Da’ despairs of ever seeing his beloved family again, until Drew wanders into the House of Oddities and helps Da’ escape.<br><br>Is it fate, kismet, or destiny that brings together the offspring of two very unique families? Have these two been waiting for each other, and will the future hold the love they’d both been seeking?

Tinnean · LGBT+
Not enough ratings
124 Chs

Chapter 106

Whimpers spilled from his mouth, and he turned and ran back the way they had come. Captain Knight had to have anti-venom serum on his boat. Cally was paying him. The man would have to save him!

Cally’s vision began to cloud along the edges, and he knew he’d never make it back to the beach. You’ve got a knife, he reminded himself. He ripped back his sleeve and moaned at the site the torn material revealed—his right arm turning a frightening shade of purple-black and swelling, but he could see the two puncture wounds. He pulled the knife from its sheath on his calf and cut the skin. Blood flowed freely, and he almost pissed himself in relief. He was doing something about the situation. It would be all right.