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Sunday, March 31, 2024
Lore of Arcana excerpt: Land of Skies
“We thought we outran the human race.
It was a beautiful world, my friends, more so than now. Pure, untouched, and
the sacred sites flourished, tapping the magic of the earth, intensifying the
wonder that was Valaris. I wish you could have seen it the way it was.”
“Lord Vallorin?” Lanto interrupted.
“May I ask something? Who named this world? And what does it mean?”
“I wonder how many have asked that -
maybe you are the first. I named it. This is my world, here in my heart, into
all eternity. We were fleeing after another battle with the humans, one that
went against us that day, when something bright caught my eye, a flash in the
distance of space. There was no time to investigate, but I was intrigued enough
to return later, centuries later. It was a world far from well-travelled
routes, no more than a blue dot. It was simplicity, purity, and I named it
then. Valaris. Ancient Valleur for Land
of Skies. I never forgot where it lay.”
“Wow,” Lanto breathed.
“Land of Skies? Really?” Raken asked
and, for once, he looked at her directly. “Perfect.” She smiled at him, causing
him to look elsewhere again.
“Indeed,” Taranis murmured.
Travel from a Land
of Skies isolated in space to civilisations flourishing underground, from a
chaos curtain to sacred sites and more, in this epic Fantasy/Sci-Fi omnibus.
Saturday, March 30, 2024
Friday, March 29, 2024
Thursday, March 28, 2024
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
Tuesday, March 26, 2024
Monday, March 25, 2024
Sunday, March 24, 2024
Excerpt: ECHO (Seasons 1) - Grey ghosts in white fog
There
were hundreds. By the gods. How had they ended up trapped? However it came to
pass wasn’t the main issue, though. He needed all lost souls to congregate for
this to work. Potentially, any stragglers in the aftermath would not again
approach, thinking it would end their existence, terrible as it was for them.
“I
see you,” he said aloud. “I can help you.” The forms stilled, but he did notice
a thickening in the rear as if many more suddenly joined the crowd. Good. “I
swear to send you into your Afterlife, if you will grant me the opportunity to
do so.”
A low
whistle in front of his horse revealed that Sabian had arrived, although Echo
couldn’t see him. “How many, Echo?” came the man’s disembodied question.
“No
clue. Can you do this?”
“They
are wary, but yes. Talk to them while I prepare.”
Echo
raised his voice. “Do you hear me? Someone has come with the talent to take you
into the realms beyond this one where you may finally be at peace. Whatever
lies in your souls now, whether fury or numbness, does not determine your
destination. No supernatural power judges you for reacting to this current
state of waiting. Where you go is determined by who you truly are in your deep
recesses. You are Diluvan, and you walk in the Light. Please, we mean you no
harm. Will you gather all for this to be?”
Sight
now was more about grey than white, which meant more and more ghostly Diluvans
were entering the assembly. The greyness undulated, due to arrivals requiring
space, and then abruptly, all movement ceased. Did that mean all were present?
Did it mean they accepted?
“They
are ready,” Sabian murmured. “Well done, Echo. Do no more; I will take it from
here.”
A
dead kind of silence descended then, one that included utter motionlessness.
Even the fog felt otherworldly, without substance. The sense of cloying wetness
evaporated entirely.
Then,
poof.
The
fog simply vanished.
Blue
sky blazed overhead.
Even unseen
Sabian was gone. That wasn’t as much an astonishment, however; Sabian needed to
leave with the souls.
Okyd
shouted somewhere, and the sound of his horse’s hooves was loud in the
stillness.
Mabellee
cleared her throat. “What, Echo?”
Brief
as the event had been, he had not the wherewithal to explain. Oreun indicated
that she would, and thus he released the woman, kneeing his mount forward. A
few paces removed, he halted again to lace his hands on his head, and inhaled
massive breaths repeatedly. By the gods, that had been strange. Other.
Fair-haired
and blue-eyed Sabian reappeared then, grinning, and Echo slid from his mount.
The two men entered a back-slapping embrace, something that was all about
relief.
“Thanks,
man,” Echo said fervently as they drew apart.
“I’m
agog as to how a bunch of Diluvans managed to stick around,” Sabian laughed. “They
will be fine. I received only gratefulness as they dissipated.” He gazed around
… and saw Oreun. “That’s a Kallanon. What’s going on here?”
Might
be an idea to fill Sabian in, who could then take the message to Torrullin and
Elianas. “You have an hour or two?”
Still
watching the dragonne, Sabian muttered, “For this I’ll give you a day or two.”
Grinning from ear to ear, Echo started talking.
The world Luvanor has four continents, but the small one in the south remains abandoned after massive volcanic eruptions destroyed the land a long time ago, creating simultaneously an impassable trench in the ocean few dare cross.
Abandoned. Uninhabited. Perhaps dangerous. The type of adventure Echayn Valla, aka Echo, goes in search of, hoping to discover remains from that bygone era, or perhaps he hopes to find something new about himself.
Don’t they say be careful of what you wish for? Echo is about to embark on the greatest misadventure of his life. Nothing is as it seems, as he will soon realise. Join him now for a journey of discovery that will test his wits, his strength … and his heart.
This is also a love story.
Saturday, March 23, 2024
Friday, March 22, 2024
Thursday, March 21, 2024
Wednesday, March 20, 2024
Tuesday, March 19, 2024
Monday, March 18, 2024
Sunday, March 17, 2024
Excerpt: Ilfin of Arc - Green Orb
My story with a Celtic twist, so fits in nicely for St Patrick's Day :)
ON
THE THIRD
day of employing Horin’s bridges, it changed.
The
plateau dwellers had to fight the authorities to leave their cities and towns;
they escaped slave masters, ran from raiders, coped in extreme weather
conditions, and even suffered the cavalry chasing them. All this happened while
they brimmed with both fear and hope. They had also seen and lived sorcery now.
The latter had saved them numerous times.
Mirlin
grew up accepting the talents as a natural condition, but even in the west it
was not commonplace. He, too, needed to fight the authorities to leave, and
walked across the plains in the hottest dry season in living memory. It nearly
killed him.
Thus,
everyone marching knew about hardship, wherever they originated from, and
expected the unexpected, but they had overlooked something integral.
The
authorities tested for talents long before Damin sprung the Porlese trap and therefore
discovered many latent abilities; why else continue the program of testing? Logically,
it meant those authorities, whoever they were, possessed certain talents as
theirs to command. The unfortunates caught before the march to a haven did not now
walk with the host; they remained as captives upon the plateau.
This
fundamental oversight did not occur to Mirlin until everything changed, and by then
it was too late.
On
Horin’s second bridge of the day they heard what sounded like the drone of
insects, possibly a swarm in flight. At first Mirlin thought of bees, perhaps
even locusts, but there was nothing to be seen. Eyes darted everywhere, his and
many others, only to look again at each in confusion. The wildlife inhabiting
the plains, whether mammal, reptile, avian or insect, was another unknown
factor; the approaching mass could be anything.
Except
there was nothing to be seen.
In
consternation, he halted. The Mur girl’s face captured his attention and drained
him of all hope. Siri lifted her head upward and her face lost all colour. Her
jaw hung slack and she could not move. With shivers of dread coursing through him,
Mirlin too looked up.
Blue
war shields were in the air, flying in formation, on swift approach, and atop
each curved platform perched a man, bow raised, face manic, and mouth wide as
if screaming challenge.
This
was the effort of someone controlling the talent for utter manipulation, able
to alter the normal into something extraordinary. Perhaps more than one mind
achieved it, a concerted joining of power, he could not know, but it was
obvious that someone had taken an ordinary war shield and created from it a
flying machine.
Many
flying machines.
This
was something straight out of a Glonu legend.
How
the soldiers were strong-armed into accepting the duty was anyone’s guess; men
did not fly, after all – creatures feathered and scaled did. Perhaps those
gaping mouths had more to do with fear than it did with challenge. However it came
to pass, it no longer featured, for a host of trained men was about to attack
from the heavens.
Cursing
under his breath, Mirlin flayed himself for his lack of foresight. By the
sands, not that anyone would have foreseen a situation close to it even in
imagination. This event would be difficult to recover from. Many would die this
day.
The
first arrows flew.
“Off
the path!” Damin shouted.
Fear
paralysed everyone.
“MOVE!”
Damin hollered, cupping his hands at his mouth. “Horin needs the bridge!”
Animation
returned, and men, women and children launched into the scrub, hauling animals
with them. It was a mess of limbs and gear, but it happened fast. Arrows thudded
to earth and some found flesh. Gargles swiftly became screams.
Damin
and Mirlin immediately formed a buffer over Horin when the boy kneeled, the men
locking into a forearm grip and crouching over him. Mirlin suffered the sense
of a thousand arrows smacking into his exposed back; no doubt Damin felt the
same. Siri hunkered between Forest’s legs beside them, praying to Massin’s
so-called benevolent stars.
“Quickly,
Horin,” Damin murmured.
Mirlin
marvelled at his calm.
The
rain of barbs intensified, and the shields overhead blotted the sun. They squatted
within a twilight of death with eternal doom but an arrowhead away. Gooseflesh
assailed skin and ears twitched.
“Horin,” Mirlin urged also.
The
lad shook head to toe. Fear had him. He swallowed with difficulty, eyes
flitting into every direction.
“Concentrate
on what you must do,” Damin said. “We deal with pain after, all right?”
“Do
it,” Siri added.
Horin
stared at her for a moment, and then nodded. He elevated his hand and, thank
the sands, the ‘bridge’ lifted and swiftly altered both substance and shape. It
became fluid, as heavy water.
Everything
froze in the ensuing moment. Arrows juddered to a stop in the air. Shields halted
in mid-flight and -turn. Soldiers were immobilised in various poses, while the
marchers were as living statues. The green barrier did not move either.
Frowning,
Mirlin wondered what the boy sought to achieve. Horin gazed at Damin. It
appeared only the four of them were able to move.
“The
only way to end it, Damin, is by killing all of them.”
Those
words explained the frozen state surrounding them. Horin sought permission to
do what he had to, or hoped for absolution before the act. Siri was pale, but
remained silent, her gaze moving to her brother also.
Damin
closed his eyes. His jaw worked through his inner tension. “It is us or them,
Horin. This is defence, not cold murder.”
Horin
nodded, his face oddly expressionless, the reaction of a mature man rather than
that of a mere boy, and his fingers opened to bleed tendrils of red light. Those
scarlet wisps, reminding Mirlin of blood, weaved into the pulsating jade
substance, to form a lattice within the fluidity. Abruptly Horin clenched his
hand into a fist and they flinched as sound and movement resumed with the next
heartbeat.
It
was chaos. People ran and stumbled, screamed, and groaned. Arrows caught in
mid-flight smacked down. Donkeys brayed and horses neighed. Shields in the sky
buckled briefly before correcting for the next pass.
Mirlin
read terror in many eyes. The soldiers on those shields stared at the rising
substance, and they were afraid. On the ground, silence fell as everyone gazed
up. Even the animals were now quiet.
Arrows
were nocked and loosed ever faster, but now none found target; the spreading green
and red ‘net’ absorbed every impact. The magical device lifted ever higher and
stretched wider and further, becoming almost transparent, it was that thin. It
was now a veil between the marchers and the archers on their flying blue shields.
Mirlin’s
heart threatened to escape its cage in his chest. Peripherally, for the
spectacle overhead garnered all his attention, he noticed Horin punch the air.
The
miasma exploded.
The
sonic boom accompanying it felled those on the ground. They stumbled to knees, fell
to all fours, but still all stared up, transfixed. Small pellets of sorcery
targeted the archers. Tiny missiles smacked into flesh with popping, wet sounds
that served to empty a few guts on the ground.
Siri
gagged, but held on to the contents of her stomach.
Mirlin
expected the archers to explode also, by the sands, but instead they became as
nothing in an instant. One moment a man perched atop a shield, the next he was ether.
His shield hurtled to earth, and his bow and arrow pouch joined the headlong
tumble. Within two minutes the sky was cleared, and shields, bows and arrows
littered the scrubby terrain.
Horin
unwrapped his fingers. The miasma instantly formed anew and then contracted swiftly
until a tangible green orb rushed to him, and lowered gently into his palm.
His
fingers enclosed it and he stared at it in horror. “It was inside me,” he
whispered, “and now it is free.”
Come, reader, join the great march today …