
Angela Elyon
Angels Fall From the Skies
"Angels Fall From the Skies" is a 25,600-word romantasy novella that blends forbidden angelic romance with the aching intimacy of a guardian-protected bond. Set in rain-slick Turin, Italy, this story follows an angel who breaks Heaven’s oldest laws for the woman he was only meant to watch die. With darkening feathers, stolen moments, and a contract that demands execution for love, this is a star-crossed tale for readers who want their romance dangerous, their stakes celestial, and their endings earned through sacrifice.
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Deucalion volunteers for the Bureau of Terrestrial Missions because Heaven’s marble halls have begun to feel like a tomb. His assignment sounds simple: befriend Eunisia, a woman on her seventh and final reincarnation, and make her final days bearable. Her death date is already written. Her killer is already walking the streets of Turin. Deucalion is not allowed to interfere.
He signs the contract anyway.
But Earth is louder, rawer, and more vivid than Heaven ever was. When Deucalion holds a door for Eunisia and their hands brush, something cracks inside his angelic detachment. He tells himself it is just the mission. Then a car jumps the curb, and he throws his body between her and death before he can think. Grey feathers begin appearing among the white.
He breaks the rules one by one. He kisses her. He tells her what he is. He takes her flying above the Mole Antonelliana, her laughter swallowed by the wind, her fingers touching his wings without fear.
But the contract has a penalty. Execution. And Yaeiros, the cold angel who wrote the rules, is already watching.
When Eunisia offers to die to save him, Deucalion faces an impossible choice: let fate take her, or tear the contract apart and watch everyone he loves fall from the sky.
What happens when an angel refuses to obey?
What happens when love is the only thing Heaven cannot punish fast enough?
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This novella is for every reader who has ever wanted a love story that burns through rules, hierarchies, and the cold indifference of fate itself. "Angels Fall From the Skies" delivers grey-feathered longing, rain-streaked Turin nights, and the quiet devastation of choosing someone even when it costs everything. No recycled tropes. No safe endings. Just an angel who weeps when his wings are purified and a woman who swears she will never let him go until she dies. You will not forget the taste of cigarette smoke shared between two beings who were never supposed to touch.
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