
Part of Series
[Siren PolyAmour: Erotic Sci-Fi PolyAmour Romance, F/M/M/M/M, M/F/M, M/M, Multiple Partners Sharing, Public Exhibition] On Kalaria, native-born women are a rarity, and Kalaria's Council of Elders is ever-vigilant that only the best and the strongest clans qualify for a precious Jewel. Jerran, Loran, Mikah and Kai ... leader, healer, trader and warrior ... have worked long and hard to win a Jewel, despite Jerran's "taint" of off-world heritage. Beautiful and seductive, trained from girlhood to be all things to her mates, Shantay is everything half-brothers Jerran and Kai and lovers Mikah and Loran desired. But jealousy and greed are universal. Because of the machinations of a vindictive courtesan, Shantay is ripped away from her mates by a slaver eager to cash in on the value of a rare and priceless Kalari Jewel, rumoured to be the ultimate sex slave. Her men will follow her into space itself to reclaim The Family Jewel. "Chuckling to myself, I was considering all the euphemisms for a man's, ahem, family jewels when I started thinking about a heroine called a Family Jewel, and imagining a world where women are rare treasures. She would have a "he-rem" of men and be the perfect mate each man—or, in the case of Loran and Mikah, each couple—needs." ~ Raina ~ ** A Siren Erotic Romance
Author

Raised in an Air Force family, Raina lived in such diverse places as Winnipeg, Manitoba, and Gander, Newfoundland, before leaving the nest and settling down near Ottawa, Ontario. Some skepticism about the earning value of an English degree made Raina turn to a career in journalism. While almost two decades in newspapers in Canada's capital has made her revise that opinion, there's still no thrill quite like getting the paper to press on a heavy news day with an early deadline. At home, when not riding herd on her four children—two girls and two boys—or trying to squeeze in some writing time, Raina can most often be found reading the work of her favourite authors, new and old. Raina is a great believer in happy endings, as anyone who reads her work will attest. After all, what's the point of writing fiction if you can't put a little joy in people's lives? [as writes as Jayne Davis]