Hi Everyone!
Here's another teasing taste of my second book. Enjoy! :-)
At first Uaine thought the room was moving, but he
quickly realized what had happened. The
Siorghra, literally 'eternal love', bond hand formed between the female and
him. He breathed deeply, trying to
steady himself in the sudden onslaught of feelings, and attempted to process
this astonishing eventuality. As impossible as it might seem, this human was
his Anamchara, his soul-mate, and so the next queen of the Summer Court of
Fairie!
News, possible items of interest, and random thoughts on various topics. Thanks for reading and please feel free to drop me a line! :-)
Who Is Mistral Dawn?
Mistral Dawn is a thirty-something gal who has lived on both coasts of the US but somehow never in the middle. She currently resides in the Southeast US with her kitty cats (please spay or neuter! :-)) where she works as a hospital drudge and attends graduate school. Taken By The Huntsman is her first effort at writing fiction and if it is well received she has ideas for several more novels and short-stories in this series. Please feel free to visit her on FaceBook or drop her a line at mistralkdawn@gmail.com
Pages
- Home
- Taken By The Huntsman
- Bound By The Summer Prince
- Intrigue In The Summer Court
- Captivated By The Winter King
- ***How To Get An Interview On My Blog
- #Interviews I've Conducted
- My Random Musings
- June 2015 Positivity Blog Tour Posts! :-)
- #Books I've #Reviewed! :-)
- Petri Dish Chronicles
- Gems Of Strength Anthology
- Thoth's Journal
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
A Title Contest! ;-)
Hi Everyone!
As I mentioned in Sunday's blog post, I'd like to have a contest to pick the title of my second book. I won't tell you yet what the prize for the contest will be (it's a surprise! ;-) ), but there will be one on the condition that I actually choose one of the suggested titles as the title for my book. Assuming I get more than one suggestion, there will be voting but I get the final vote. ;-) I'm looking forward to this, and I hope you guys are too, and really hope it will be fun. To make it easier to think of a title I'll be posting excerpts from the book, now and then, on this blog. There won't be a set schedule, since I don't know when I'll get something written that could be used as an excerpt, so stay tuned! ;-) Below I'll paste the links for what I've posted so far. To submit a title suggestion please post it in the comments. Thank you everyone!! :-)
http://mistralkdawn.blogspot.com/2014/12/sunday-treat.html
http://mistralkdawn.blogspot.com/2014/12/book-2-in-progress-chapter-one-subject.html
As I mentioned in Sunday's blog post, I'd like to have a contest to pick the title of my second book. I won't tell you yet what the prize for the contest will be (it's a surprise! ;-) ), but there will be one on the condition that I actually choose one of the suggested titles as the title for my book. Assuming I get more than one suggestion, there will be voting but I get the final vote. ;-) I'm looking forward to this, and I hope you guys are too, and really hope it will be fun. To make it easier to think of a title I'll be posting excerpts from the book, now and then, on this blog. There won't be a set schedule, since I don't know when I'll get something written that could be used as an excerpt, so stay tuned! ;-) Below I'll paste the links for what I've posted so far. To submit a title suggestion please post it in the comments. Thank you everyone!! :-)
http://mistralkdawn.blogspot.com/2014/12/sunday-treat.html
http://mistralkdawn.blogspot.com/2014/12/book-2-in-progress-chapter-one-subject.html
Monday, December 29, 2014
Maggie Plummer Interviewed By Mistral Dawn
Hi Everyone!
We're here with
Maggie Plummer today, a very funny lady who lives in western Montana. Tell
us about yourself Maggie! :-)
Maggie: Along the
winding trail, I've wandered around the country and worked a dizzying array of
seasonal and regular jobs. I’ve been a journalist, book publicist, book editor,
census enumerator, school bus driver, field interviewer, waitress, post office
clerk, fish processor, library clerk, retail salesperson, Good Humor girl,
fishing boat first mate, race horse hot walker, apple picker, and bus girl. I
have written three books, and am now working on another novel (and it’s not
historical fiction this time!).
I’m the author of award-winning SPIRITED AWAY – A NOVEL OF
THE STOLEN IRISH (2012, CreateSpace Independent Publishing) and a non-fiction
book called PASSING IT ON: VOICES FROM THE FLATHEAD INDIAN RESERVATION (2008,
Salish Kootenai College Press, Pablo, Montana). My new book, DARING PASSAGE, is
my second published novel.
Me: Wow! Sounds like you've had an interesting life! :-) Can
you tell us about your latest book and what inspired
it?
Maggie: DARING PASSAGE: BOOK TWO OF THE SPIRITED AWAY SAGA is the
much-awaited sequel to SPIRITED AWAY. I was inspired by the many enthusiastic
readers who loved my first novel and demanded a sequel.
Me: Sounds like a real labor of love! What are
you working on now?
Maggie: I am
revising a novel that has been gathering dust for a while. It includes a lot of
Montana gold rush history, but the story is told within a modern framework. I
guess it would be categorized as Contemporary Mainstream Fiction.
Me: So diversifying your portfolio, huh?
Awesome! Are there any authors, or books, that have influenced you?
Maggie: I love Harper
Lee, Anna Quindlen, Pat Conroy, Wally Lamb, Norman Maclean, Barbara Kingsolver,
Toni Morrison, Anne Tyler…I could go on and on. I have been influenced by the
books TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT, ANIMAL DREAMS, PRINCE OF
TIDES, THE GREAT SANTINI, SHIPPING NEWS, and many others.
Me: So the really deep
reading moves you then, that's great! :-) What are you reading now?
Maggie: I’m currently reading THE DEATH OF SANTINI by Pat Conroy. He is
such an amazing writer!
Me: Fun! ;-) For
those who might consider reading your book, what would you tell them to expect?
Maggie: I wrote DARING PASSAGE so that it can stand
alone, even though it is a sequel. However, I think readers will enjoy it more
if they read SPIRITED AWAY – A NOVEL OF THE STOLEN IRISH first.
What can they expect? In the first novel, they
can expect to experience an intimate, compelling story about 1650s Irish
slavery in the Caribbean. In the sequel, they will discover the rest of slave
Freddy O'Brennan's tale. It's still 1656, and Freddy is on the run. Determined
to protect her young children and keep her family together, she is tested more
than ever as she navigates a choking gauntlet of greed, corruption, duplicity,
and bloody violence. Romantic sparks fly, smolder, and threaten to explode.
DARING PASSAGE is a 70,000-word historical romance
novel that captures a rare glimpse of life in the New World colonies of the
seventeenth century.
Me: Sounds like you put a lot of research into
your work. What is your favorite part of being an author?
Maggie: At this point, my favorite part of being an
author is opening readers’ eyes about 1650s Irish slavery. Most people have
never heard of it. Not only do they get to enjoy a good story, they learn about
an important yet forgotten chapter in the history of human trafficking.
Me: It is
definitely important to make sure people don't forget the mistakes of the past,
kudos! Do you have a day job as well?
Maggie: No.
I am semi-retired.
Me: Lucky you! Then
writing is your job for now, what would you say is the hardest and easiest part
about being a writer?
Maggie: The hardest parts are handling negative reviews and hanging
in there when a manuscript seems terrible.
As I wrote DARING
PASSAGE, I had a horrible feeling that no matter what I did, no matter how hard
I tried, this sequel would not measure up to my first novel. However, my ‘first
readers’ loved the book. One of them told me that I have gotten better. That
made me feel elated, and excited to release the sequel.
As for negative reviews:
it’s not easy to let the nastiness roll off one’s back – especially when it
gets personal, like some of them do. I am fortunate, though, in having many
more positive reviews than negative ones. I’m proud of the fact that I have
never commented to any of the negative reviewers. That’s a real triumph for me!
The easiest part about
being a writer is spending the royalty money. Ha!
Me: Yeah, it can
be really hard when someone is unkind towards something you've worked so hard
on, it's good that you've been able to "take the high road" with the
negative reviews, and congratulations on all of the positive ones! :-) Just so readers have a better idea of what
they are in for, what genre do you place your books in?
Maggie: Historical
Fiction. DARING PASSAGE may also fit into the Historical Romance genre.
Me: Gotta love those romance novels!! ;-) Anything else you'd like to tell your
readers?
Maggie: I appreciate
my readers’ support more than they will ever know. I am very, very grateful to
them.
Me: And just so folks can find these wonderful
stories, are there any links you'd like me to post? :-)
Maggie: Yes, please!
SPIRITED AWAY - A NOVEL OF THE
STOLEN IRISH
http://amzn.to/1qK9PwF
http://amzn.to/1qK9PwF
DARING PASSAGE: BOOK TWO OF THE
SPIRITED AWAY SAGA
http://amzn.to/1B0DDyt
http://amzn.to/1B0DDyt
Amazon Author page: http://amzn.to/1p0gBDy
My web site: http://maggieplummerauthor.weebly.com/
My fan page on Facebook:
Find me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/maggiep1951
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Sunday Treat! :-)
Just the barest snippet from the second chapter of the book I'm working on. I'd love to hear what you thought when you read it. :-) At some point soon I'll probably have a contest to pick a title for this one. Does anyone have any suggestions? If you do, please leave them in the comments and that way we'll all have something to vote on! :-)
As he half-dragged her through the archway Roni finally saw what he meant by 'the dungeon.' This was no police station; it was a full-out medieval torture chamber! The flickering glow she had seen was a huge fireplace with a roaring fire. Sticking out from a shelf inside of it were the handles of several branding irons. There was a rack, an iron maiden, and many other implements of torture she couldn't name but whose purpose was clear.
As he half-dragged her through the archway Roni finally saw what he meant by 'the dungeon.' This was no police station; it was a full-out medieval torture chamber! The flickering glow she had seen was a huge fireplace with a roaring fire. Sticking out from a shelf inside of it were the handles of several branding irons. There was a rack, an iron maiden, and many other implements of torture she couldn't name but whose purpose was clear.
Saturday, December 27, 2014
Excerpts From Taken By The Huntsman
Hi Everyone!
If you haven't read Taken By The Huntsman yet and would like to get a better idea of what it's about, there are several excerpts posted on the Microcerpt page. Please feel free to check them out! :-)
Thanks!
Mistral
http://microcerpt.com/mistralkdawn/
If you haven't read Taken By The Huntsman yet and would like to get a better idea of what it's about, there are several excerpts posted on the Microcerpt page. Please feel free to check them out! :-)
Thanks!
Mistral
http://microcerpt.com/mistralkdawn/
Friday, December 26, 2014
Awesome Five Star Review For Taken By The Huntsman By New Apple Literary Service!!
A magical romance - I was pleasantly surprised
'Taken By The Huntsman' follows the journey of Cassie, a lonely woman barely coping in the human world, and Cadeyrn, the Elking and leader of the Wild Hunt. Cassie is kidnapped and hidden away inside Cadeyrn's fortress in Fairie once he realizes that she is to be his destined soulmate. Cadeyrn acts with good intentions and is the hero of the story despite the way my description makes him sound. The story is a fairy tale (no pun intended) that reminded me of the mystery and wonder I felt as a child reading similar stories. The romantic and magical quality of this book may have appealed to my inner child but there were more explicit aspects that could only be appreciated by my present maturity.
'Taken By The Hunstman' was engaging, well written and thought provoking while remaining entertaining and erotic. That combination is often rare in books standing out in the genre of fantasy romance. The author does a terrific job of keeping your attention and walking the reader through the magical realm of the Fae with enough backstory and description to introduce the characters, their language, their history and their culture to those who love fantasy and those without prior experience to this world. The sensual nature of the novel is handled with dignity and great care even though the sex is erotic and extremely steamy. This is a feat in and of itself. The sexual aspect intertwines with the romance and was presented in a way that is not heavy handed at all. Even the introduction of bondage fits well with the characters and their struggle to come to terms with love and how it differs across the gap between the world of the Fae and the world of the humans.
I was pleasantly surprised with this book. There were a few grammatical errors, as to be expected with indie books, none of which deterred me from falling in love with the story and the characters. I'll be anxiously awaiting the author's next release.
http://www.amazon.com/review/R1OOX9E0XDU84H/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B00NGANG5C
'Taken By The Huntsman' follows the journey of Cassie, a lonely woman barely coping in the human world, and Cadeyrn, the Elking and leader of the Wild Hunt. Cassie is kidnapped and hidden away inside Cadeyrn's fortress in Fairie once he realizes that she is to be his destined soulmate. Cadeyrn acts with good intentions and is the hero of the story despite the way my description makes him sound. The story is a fairy tale (no pun intended) that reminded me of the mystery and wonder I felt as a child reading similar stories. The romantic and magical quality of this book may have appealed to my inner child but there were more explicit aspects that could only be appreciated by my present maturity.
'Taken By The Hunstman' was engaging, well written and thought provoking while remaining entertaining and erotic. That combination is often rare in books standing out in the genre of fantasy romance. The author does a terrific job of keeping your attention and walking the reader through the magical realm of the Fae with enough backstory and description to introduce the characters, their language, their history and their culture to those who love fantasy and those without prior experience to this world. The sensual nature of the novel is handled with dignity and great care even though the sex is erotic and extremely steamy. This is a feat in and of itself. The sexual aspect intertwines with the romance and was presented in a way that is not heavy handed at all. Even the introduction of bondage fits well with the characters and their struggle to come to terms with love and how it differs across the gap between the world of the Fae and the world of the humans.
I was pleasantly surprised with this book. There were a few grammatical errors, as to be expected with indie books, none of which deterred me from falling in love with the story and the characters. I'll be anxiously awaiting the author's next release.
http://www.amazon.com/review/R1OOX9E0XDU84H/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B00NGANG5C
Thursday, December 25, 2014
Taken By The Huntsman Is A Sci-Fi/Fantasy Freaks Christmas Pick!!
Hey Everyone!!
Taken By The Huntsman is one of Betty's (from Sci-Fi/Fantasy Freaks) Christmas Picks!! Check it out! :-)
http://scififantasyfreak.com/bettys-picks-for-thursday-december-25th/
Taken By The Huntsman is one of Betty's (from Sci-Fi/Fantasy Freaks) Christmas Picks!! Check it out! :-)
http://scififantasyfreak.com/bettys-picks-for-thursday-december-25th/
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Taken By The Huntsman Featured On Day 24 Of #25DaysOfIndie!
Hey Everyone!!
Keeley Frank, who is a TOTALLY AWESOME YouTuber, was kind enough to feature my novel, Taken By The Huntsman, on the 24th day of her #25DaysOfIndie project!! Please check it out and give it some love!!! :-) You can also enter to win a free copy of Taken By The Huntsman!! :-)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2oMx3-AqB4
Keeley Frank, who is a TOTALLY AWESOME YouTuber, was kind enough to feature my novel, Taken By The Huntsman, on the 24th day of her #25DaysOfIndie project!! Please check it out and give it some love!!! :-) You can also enter to win a free copy of Taken By The Huntsman!! :-)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2oMx3-AqB4
My Review Of Blood Assassin By Alexandra Ivy
Blood Assassin is the second novel in Alexandra Ivy's
Sentinels Series. It's set on
Earth in a society that is pretty much exactly like the one we all know and
some love more than others. ;-) The one
difference is that there are some people who have special powers due to genetic
mutations (yes, I thought of the X-Men too but it's different enough to be
interesting) who are called "high-bloods." The powers these people
have varies from person to person with some being stronger and/or having a broader
range of powers than others. The story
in Blood Assassin centers around Serra (a powerful psychic) and Fane (a guardian who protects other high-bloods
using muscle, brains, and magic). Serra
is kidnapped by a powerful witch-assassin, Bas, who wants her to find his four
year old daughter who is being held hostage by person(s) unknown. To convince her to do his bidding he infects
her with a magical poison which only he can remove. Serra and Fane have to find the little girl before time runs out,
and then find a way to make Bas keep his promise to remove the poison.
While I'd read Alexandra Ivy's Guardians of
Eternity series before, Blood Assassin was the first novel I read in
her Sentinels Series. I wasn't
disappointed. Since I haven't read the
first book (something I'll have to rectify) in the series, Born in Blood,
I had to play a little catch-up with the back story, but Ms. Ivy shares enough
that this novel could be read on its own.
There were a few typos in the ebook copy of this novel which were a bit
distracting at times, but not enough to detract from the charm of the
story. Reading the interactions between
two very strong and opinionated protagonists was a lot of fun, and, as in all
of Ms. Ivy's stories, the romance between Serra and Fane was HOT! Overall, five
stars; I would definitely recommend this book to lovers of paranormal romance
novels. :-)
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
Mary Ann Bernal: Ten Facts You Didn’t Know You Needed to Know About Author Mistral Dawn
Hi Everyone!!
Awesome indie author Mary Ann Bernal has been kind enough to post ten facts you didn't know you needed to know about me! ;-) Whether you actually needed to know them is debatable, but it is kind of fun so go ahead and check it out and give us both some love! :-)
Thanks everyone, you're all the best!! :-)
Mistral
http://maryannbernal.blogspot.com/2014/12/ten-facts-you-didnt-know-you-needed-to.html#.VJgNgACAA
Awesome indie author Mary Ann Bernal has been kind enough to post ten facts you didn't know you needed to know about me! ;-) Whether you actually needed to know them is debatable, but it is kind of fun so go ahead and check it out and give us both some love! :-)
Thanks everyone, you're all the best!! :-)
Mistral
http://maryannbernal.blogspot.com/2014/12/ten-facts-you-didnt-know-you-needed-to.html#.VJgNgACAA
Monday, December 22, 2014
Mistral Dawn's Interview Of Markie Madden
Hey Everyone!
I'm here with Markie Madden today, a 39 year-old, married author who has two teenage daughters. She lives in SE Missouri with three dogs and a horse! And has written 3 books: Keeping a Backyard Horse, My Butterfly Cancer and Once Upon a Western Way.
Me: So Markie, what is the name of your latest book and what inspired it?
Markie: They all came out at the same time, but my best-seller (in paid sales) is My Butterfly Cancer. It's the memoir of my personal battle with leukemia and how I became an independently-published author. I use the theory of the butterfly effect to explain this!
Me: That's awsome! And what are you working on now?
Markie: I have two projects I'm currently working on. Triple Heist is a crime romance where Allison, the main character, is head of security at the Federal Reserve bank. But she has a plan to rob the bank! Fang and Claw is book one in the Undead Unit series. Lacey is a detective with the Dallas police department. She's also a vampire. In a society where the Undead creatures are, if not completely accepted, tolerated, she's just been put in charge of an elite squad to investigate crimes dealing with Werewolves, Demons, Reapers, Zombies, and so on. I'm also currently working to get all my books made into audiobooks!
Me: How exciting! What genre do you place your books in?
Markie: I have two non-fiction and one fantasy/romance that I would put at about age 16+. If they read Nora Roberts type romances, mine isn't any worse in the "adult" situations. And even though my characters are young, they're actually married!
Me: For those who might consider reading your book, what would you tell them to expect?
Markie: If you pick up My Butterfly Cancer, expect to be introduced to chemotherapy in the harshest of ways! Embarrassing though it was, I didn't hold back in detailing the trials I went through, even when I thought I was going to die!
Me: How frightening! Well we're all glad you're here with us now. Changing gears a bit, what would you say is the hardest and easiest parts about being a writer?
Markie: The hardest part of writing is definately selling! I first published on Smashwords in 2012 (Once Upon a Weatern Way), and sold 5 copies in two years! Now that I'm on Amazon, and Twitter and other social media, sales are better, but it takes a lot of effort and time! For me, writing the beginning is always the easiest! I don't know how many "first draft first chapters" I've scribbled down in the past!
Me: I think most independent authors can sympathize with how hard it is to market your book, slow sales seem to be a universal bane, at least sometimes. And what is your favorite part of being an author?
Markie: I love the fact that I can take readers into another world, if only for a short time. And with my memoir, I hope to inspire other cancer patients who might be feeling like there's no way to overcome!
Me: I'm sure everyone is wondering by now: do you have a day job as well?
Markie: Before I had cancer I was a manager at Auto Zone, a chain of auto parts stores. I could still get my job back, but I haven't recovered 100%, and if I can't carry and install a car battery (or lift any other heavy things we have around), I feel the job is better for someone who needs it. Jobs are hard to come by in our small town.
Me: Yeah, jobs are scarce where I live too, it seems to be a common problem in less populated areas. Are there any authors or books that have influenced you?
Markie: My favorite authors are J.D. Robb, Nora Roberts, Kay Hooper, and Patricia Cornwall. Among others! I especially like Kay Hoopers psychic FBI unit (Special Crimes Unit) series.
Me: And what are you reading now?
Markie: I haven't had much time for reading, though I'm in the middle of Yesteryear, A Novel of Reincarnation by Samyann. She bought and reviewed one of mine and I did the same.
Me: Anything else you'd like to tell your readers?
Markie: I love to hear from my readers! I like knowing I've written something they enjoy!
Well, it sounds like you are off to an excellent start at a writing career, Markie, I wish you the best of luck! For anyone who'd like to check out Markie or her books, a bunch of her links are below.
Amazon Author Page: www.amazon.com/author/margueritemadden
Website: www.margueritemarkiemadden.simplesite.com
Blog: http://www.writermarkiemadden.blogspot.com/
Twitter Handle: @naddya81975
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/booksbymarkie
Individual Book Links:
My Butterfly Cancer on Amazon http://geni.us3Xdr/
Once Upon a Weatern Way http://geni.us/26Fb
Keeping a Backyard Horse http://geni.us/47ot
She'll also be on B&N and Smashwords, but right now her books are Amazon exclusive releases
Smashwords Profile: http://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/Naddya819
Email Address: naddya81975@gmail.com
I'm here with Markie Madden today, a 39 year-old, married author who has two teenage daughters. She lives in SE Missouri with three dogs and a horse! And has written 3 books: Keeping a Backyard Horse, My Butterfly Cancer and Once Upon a Western Way.
Me: So Markie, what is the name of your latest book and what inspired it?
Markie: They all came out at the same time, but my best-seller (in paid sales) is My Butterfly Cancer. It's the memoir of my personal battle with leukemia and how I became an independently-published author. I use the theory of the butterfly effect to explain this!
Me: That's awsome! And what are you working on now?
Markie: I have two projects I'm currently working on. Triple Heist is a crime romance where Allison, the main character, is head of security at the Federal Reserve bank. But she has a plan to rob the bank! Fang and Claw is book one in the Undead Unit series. Lacey is a detective with the Dallas police department. She's also a vampire. In a society where the Undead creatures are, if not completely accepted, tolerated, she's just been put in charge of an elite squad to investigate crimes dealing with Werewolves, Demons, Reapers, Zombies, and so on. I'm also currently working to get all my books made into audiobooks!
Me: How exciting! What genre do you place your books in?
Markie: I have two non-fiction and one fantasy/romance that I would put at about age 16+. If they read Nora Roberts type romances, mine isn't any worse in the "adult" situations. And even though my characters are young, they're actually married!
Me: For those who might consider reading your book, what would you tell them to expect?
Markie: If you pick up My Butterfly Cancer, expect to be introduced to chemotherapy in the harshest of ways! Embarrassing though it was, I didn't hold back in detailing the trials I went through, even when I thought I was going to die!
Me: How frightening! Well we're all glad you're here with us now. Changing gears a bit, what would you say is the hardest and easiest parts about being a writer?
Markie: The hardest part of writing is definately selling! I first published on Smashwords in 2012 (Once Upon a Weatern Way), and sold 5 copies in two years! Now that I'm on Amazon, and Twitter and other social media, sales are better, but it takes a lot of effort and time! For me, writing the beginning is always the easiest! I don't know how many "first draft first chapters" I've scribbled down in the past!
Me: I think most independent authors can sympathize with how hard it is to market your book, slow sales seem to be a universal bane, at least sometimes. And what is your favorite part of being an author?
Markie: I love the fact that I can take readers into another world, if only for a short time. And with my memoir, I hope to inspire other cancer patients who might be feeling like there's no way to overcome!
Me: I'm sure everyone is wondering by now: do you have a day job as well?
Markie: Before I had cancer I was a manager at Auto Zone, a chain of auto parts stores. I could still get my job back, but I haven't recovered 100%, and if I can't carry and install a car battery (or lift any other heavy things we have around), I feel the job is better for someone who needs it. Jobs are hard to come by in our small town.
Me: Yeah, jobs are scarce where I live too, it seems to be a common problem in less populated areas. Are there any authors or books that have influenced you?
Markie: My favorite authors are J.D. Robb, Nora Roberts, Kay Hooper, and Patricia Cornwall. Among others! I especially like Kay Hoopers psychic FBI unit (Special Crimes Unit) series.
Me: And what are you reading now?
Markie: I haven't had much time for reading, though I'm in the middle of Yesteryear, A Novel of Reincarnation by Samyann. She bought and reviewed one of mine and I did the same.
Me: Anything else you'd like to tell your readers?
Markie: I love to hear from my readers! I like knowing I've written something they enjoy!
Well, it sounds like you are off to an excellent start at a writing career, Markie, I wish you the best of luck! For anyone who'd like to check out Markie or her books, a bunch of her links are below.
Amazon Author Page: www.amazon.com/author/margueritemadden
Website: www.margueritemarkiemadden.simplesite.com
Blog: http://www.writermarkiemadden.blogspot.com/
Twitter Handle: @naddya81975
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/booksbymarkie
Individual Book Links:
My Butterfly Cancer on Amazon http://geni.us3Xdr/
Once Upon a Weatern Way http://geni.us/26Fb
Keeping a Backyard Horse http://geni.us/47ot
She'll also be on B&N and Smashwords, but right now her books are Amazon exclusive releases
Smashwords Profile: http://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/Naddya819
Email Address: naddya81975@gmail.com
Sunday, December 21, 2014
Awesome Gang Interview Of Mistral Dawn
Hey Everybody!
I was interviewed by Awesome Gang! Check it out!
http://awesomegang.com/mistral-dawn/
I was interviewed by Awesome Gang! Check it out!
http://awesomegang.com/mistral-dawn/
Saturday, December 20, 2014
My Review of Six Cats In My Kitchen By Lyn Horner
Lyn Horner is an awesome, multigenre, indie author! She wrote Six Cats In My Kitchen, a funny, sweet, sad story about the cats and people in her life. I wrote a review for it which you can find here (http://www.amazon.com/review/R2ZB1T17LLWYO2/ref=cm_cr_pr_perm?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B004VXM0TQ ) and you can view her amazon author page here ( http://www.amazon.com/Lyn-Horner/e/B004CY506Y/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1 ). Check her out and show this indie author some love!
10/20/2014 Lyn Horner Interview Of Mistral Dawn
Hi everyone!
Check out my interview with Lyn Horner:
Check out my interview with Lyn Horner:
Friday, December 19, 2014
A Review of Grave Mercy By Robin LaFevers
Grave Mercy by Robin LaFevers was a lot of fun to read! It's
a YA fantasy novel with a little bit of romance sprinkled in. The main character, Ismae Rienne, is the
daughter of Mortain, the God of Death who has been downgraded to a saint by a
church-dominated society but who is still worshipped by many. Her father despises her as the evidence of
her mother's affair with Death and sells her in marriage to a cruel man who
nearly beats her to death when he discovers her true paternity. She escapes,
with the aid of an herb-witch and a hedge-priest, to a convent of nuns who are
dedicated to the worship and support of Mortain where she becomes an initiate
and learns the ways of Death. Once she
is trained she is dispatched to protect Brittany's 12 year old duchess and to
bring Death to those who are Marqued for it.
Along the way she meets Gavriel Duval, a Breton noble, who is also
devoted to the young duchess. Together they must find a way to preserve both
her throne and her life.
http://www.amazon.com/Grave-Mercy-Fair-Assassin-Trilogy-ebook/dp/B005LVQZLQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1419019716&sr=1-1&keywords=grave+mercy+by+robin+lafevers
A Rant: Different Does Not Mean Wrong!
Taken By The Huntsman came into being because I had a dream after having a debate with an online friend. I'll leave the details of the dream to your imagination , but the debate was about the nature of consent and what should and should not be accepted by society. I'm of the opinion that any behavior (sexual or otherwise) that is engaged in by consenting adults (of any number or combination) that does not affect anyone other than the consenting adults involved should be accepted by society. My online friend disagreed strenuously, and insisted that there are societal standards that must be adhered to; even among consenting adults in private.
While I generally try to respect any and all points of view, whether or not I agree with them, I found my friend's stance to be disturbing on many levels. First, I believe that any attempt to regulate people's freedom to act in the manner in which they feel most comfortable is a very slippery slope. Obviously people need to be careful to avoid acting in ways that infringe on other people's freedoms (in other words, your freedom to swing your arm ends at my nose), but short of that I believe it is very important for people to be free to express themselves in whatever way they feel is true to themselves. Second, I believe any attempt to define morality in regards to personal behavior is arrogant in the extreme and will ultimately be unsuccessful. Just look at how successful prohibition was.
I set out to write a book that would entertain, and hopefully arouse, my readers, but also to start a discussion about right and wrong, and consensual contact vs. non-consensual contact. There are several plot lines in my story where the characters explore their feelings, and the reasons for them, about sex, crimes, punishment of criminals, societal structure and one's place in it, justice, revenge, and both romantic and platonic relationships. I had hoped to start a dialog about how our society treats people who don't always fit into a nice, neat little box for us.
Therefore, it shouldn't have surprised me, though it did, when one of the people who know my real identity (I know, so mysterious! ;-)) read my book and informed me they were offended because the relationship between the hero and the heroine glorifies rape! I probed a little to find out why the book gave them such an impression and I was informed that in their opinion, any time one partner is restrained by another during sex it is rape. The fact that my characters repeatedly communicated with each other and sought explicit consent for every sexual encounter and act was apparently irrelevant; restraint was involved and therefore it was an act of rape.
This person wasn't the only one who has read my book who expressed concern about some of the themes contained therein, but it was their bold declaration about a subject as serious as rape that stuck in my mind. I have to say, I did expect some judgment from others when I set out to write an erotic romance novel, that's why I chose to use a pen name, but it still surprises me to hear others make blanket statements like 'all sexual encounters that involve restraining one of the participants (even when it is done with their consent and for their pleasure) are rape.'
Really?!? Rape? Rape is a very serious crime, that should never be trivialized, and, honestly, I find the comparison between the mutually agreed to and enjoyed sexual activities engaged in by my characters and an act that, by its very nature, is non-consensual, demeaning, and traumatic to the victim to be insulting. Though the activities described in Taken By The Huntsman are certainly not activities that everyone would enjoy or agree to (can anyone name any activity other than breathing, eating some form of food, and drinking some type of liquid that everyone would agree to?), there are many people who do engage in them (and enjoy them) here on planet Earth (not just in Fairie), and the claim that what they are doing is wrong or immoral in some way (or criminal, dehumanizing, and cruel like rape) is both absurd and dangerous. Seeing how popular erotica has become gives me hope that people are willing to open their minds a bit to the possibilities life has to offer, and to the idea that different does not mean wrong, but some of the conversations I've had as a result of writing Taken By The Huntsman have shown me we still have quite a ways to go.
I sincerely believe that love, in all of its many and varied forms, is magical, and that if we, as a society, can truly embrace this concept many of the problems we now find insurmountable will disappear. Until then, I wish all of you luck in finding your own magical love, and hope you will fully embrace and explore your own passions and desires.
With love,
Mistral Dawn
While I generally try to respect any and all points of view, whether or not I agree with them, I found my friend's stance to be disturbing on many levels. First, I believe that any attempt to regulate people's freedom to act in the manner in which they feel most comfortable is a very slippery slope. Obviously people need to be careful to avoid acting in ways that infringe on other people's freedoms (in other words, your freedom to swing your arm ends at my nose), but short of that I believe it is very important for people to be free to express themselves in whatever way they feel is true to themselves. Second, I believe any attempt to define morality in regards to personal behavior is arrogant in the extreme and will ultimately be unsuccessful. Just look at how successful prohibition was.
I set out to write a book that would entertain, and hopefully arouse, my readers, but also to start a discussion about right and wrong, and consensual contact vs. non-consensual contact. There are several plot lines in my story where the characters explore their feelings, and the reasons for them, about sex, crimes, punishment of criminals, societal structure and one's place in it, justice, revenge, and both romantic and platonic relationships. I had hoped to start a dialog about how our society treats people who don't always fit into a nice, neat little box for us.
Therefore, it shouldn't have surprised me, though it did, when one of the people who know my real identity (I know, so mysterious! ;-)) read my book and informed me they were offended because the relationship between the hero and the heroine glorifies rape! I probed a little to find out why the book gave them such an impression and I was informed that in their opinion, any time one partner is restrained by another during sex it is rape. The fact that my characters repeatedly communicated with each other and sought explicit consent for every sexual encounter and act was apparently irrelevant; restraint was involved and therefore it was an act of rape.
This person wasn't the only one who has read my book who expressed concern about some of the themes contained therein, but it was their bold declaration about a subject as serious as rape that stuck in my mind. I have to say, I did expect some judgment from others when I set out to write an erotic romance novel, that's why I chose to use a pen name, but it still surprises me to hear others make blanket statements like 'all sexual encounters that involve restraining one of the participants (even when it is done with their consent and for their pleasure) are rape.'
Really?!? Rape? Rape is a very serious crime, that should never be trivialized, and, honestly, I find the comparison between the mutually agreed to and enjoyed sexual activities engaged in by my characters and an act that, by its very nature, is non-consensual, demeaning, and traumatic to the victim to be insulting. Though the activities described in Taken By The Huntsman are certainly not activities that everyone would enjoy or agree to (can anyone name any activity other than breathing, eating some form of food, and drinking some type of liquid that everyone would agree to?), there are many people who do engage in them (and enjoy them) here on planet Earth (not just in Fairie), and the claim that what they are doing is wrong or immoral in some way (or criminal, dehumanizing, and cruel like rape) is both absurd and dangerous. Seeing how popular erotica has become gives me hope that people are willing to open their minds a bit to the possibilities life has to offer, and to the idea that different does not mean wrong, but some of the conversations I've had as a result of writing Taken By The Huntsman have shown me we still have quite a ways to go.
I sincerely believe that love, in all of its many and varied forms, is magical, and that if we, as a society, can truly embrace this concept many of the problems we now find insurmountable will disappear. Until then, I wish all of you luck in finding your own magical love, and hope you will fully embrace and explore your own passions and desires.
With love,
Mistral Dawn
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Merrie Housdon's Interview Of Mistral Dawn
Hey Everyone!
Check out what Merrie and I found to chat about! :-)
http://mehousdonblog.weebly.com/blog/book-feature-and-author-interview-taken-by-the-huntsmanby-mistral-dawn
Check out what Merrie and I found to chat about! :-)
http://mehousdonblog.weebly.com/blog/book-feature-and-author-interview-taken-by-the-huntsmanby-mistral-dawn
Review of Warlord's Honor by LW Browning
Hi everyone!
Check out my review of awesome indie author LW Browning's Warlord's Honor:
http://www.amazon.com/review/RR618LJO1LNNC/ref=cm_cr_pr_perm?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B00H30I99O
It's a lot of fun to read and you can find it on Amazon here:
http://www.amazon.com/Warlords-Honor-Krystile-L-W-Browning-ebook/dp/B00H30I99O/ref=cm_rdp_product
Happy reading! :-)
Check out my review of awesome indie author LW Browning's Warlord's Honor:
http://www.amazon.com/review/RR618LJO1LNNC/ref=cm_cr_pr_perm?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B00H30I99O
It's a lot of fun to read and you can find it on Amazon here:
http://www.amazon.com/Warlords-Honor-Krystile-L-W-Browning-ebook/dp/B00H30I99O/ref=cm_rdp_product
Happy reading! :-)
Kitties, Kitties, Who's Got The Kitties?!? ;-)
Someone recently asked me if the kitty in my novel Taken By The Huntsman (and the one in my upcoming second novel) are based on my pet kitties. The answer is yes and no. Sir Fuzzalot, in Taken By The Huntsman, has attributes and characteristics of several kitties I've had the privilege to know over the years. I've had a couple of kitties who had the long, silver/gray tabby fur and the large, stocky Maine Coon body type. Ironically though, neither of them acquired the moniker "fuzzy" (or any derivative or version thereof) while in my keeping. My "fuzzy" (or rather His Royal Fuzzinessness) was a short-haired blue/gray kitty (sort of looked like a Russian Blue) who passed from this plain of existence while I was in the middle of writing Taken By The Huntsman. He was 13 years old at the time, and his passing was very sudden and unexpected. I was fortunate enough to meet him when he was small enough to fit in the palm of my hand, and he made two trips across the country with me during his lifetime.
Sir Fuzzalot was already a character in Taken By The Huntsman when my "fuzzy" died, but I now sort of consider the book a tribute to him; along with the two kitties I think of when I think of Sir Fuzzalot's appearance, one of whom died of feline leukemia virus when I was a teenager and the other of whom died several years ago of kidney disease. Sir Fuzzalot's personality is also a conglomeration of these three kitties and several more I've known over the years. All kitties show their affection and appreciation of the humans who are lucky enough to know them in different ways. I chose to use some of the most endearing methods I've been privileged enough to witness over the years and combined them in the distinguished personage of Sir Fuzzalot.
Mr. Spatz (who you've been briefly introduced to, though not by name, if you've read the first chapter of the second book that I posted) is also a combination of many kitties I've known. He's a young cat, not fully grown. Somewhere around a tween and a teen. So his personality isn't fully developed yet and he's a bit rambunctious, as you'll come to find out if you read my second novel. Having done cat rescue for more years than I care to contemplate (and having worked with quite a few rescue groups in my travels) I've known many kitties in this awkward stage, and I've learned they are often just as confused and misunderstood as human children in the same phase of development. I hope to reflect this awkwardness and uncertainty in Mr. Spatz's character. His appearance is as a short-haired, black and white, tuxedo kitty, which some people may consider a rather generic appearance for a cat. I assure you, once you've known more than one tuxedo kitty you'll learn that no two are exactly alike, and Mr. Spatz will have his uniqueness as well.
So, are the kitties in my books based on the kitties in my life? Well, yes....and no.
Sir Fuzzalot was already a character in Taken By The Huntsman when my "fuzzy" died, but I now sort of consider the book a tribute to him; along with the two kitties I think of when I think of Sir Fuzzalot's appearance, one of whom died of feline leukemia virus when I was a teenager and the other of whom died several years ago of kidney disease. Sir Fuzzalot's personality is also a conglomeration of these three kitties and several more I've known over the years. All kitties show their affection and appreciation of the humans who are lucky enough to know them in different ways. I chose to use some of the most endearing methods I've been privileged enough to witness over the years and combined them in the distinguished personage of Sir Fuzzalot.
Mr. Spatz (who you've been briefly introduced to, though not by name, if you've read the first chapter of the second book that I posted) is also a combination of many kitties I've known. He's a young cat, not fully grown. Somewhere around a tween and a teen. So his personality isn't fully developed yet and he's a bit rambunctious, as you'll come to find out if you read my second novel. Having done cat rescue for more years than I care to contemplate (and having worked with quite a few rescue groups in my travels) I've known many kitties in this awkward stage, and I've learned they are often just as confused and misunderstood as human children in the same phase of development. I hope to reflect this awkwardness and uncertainty in Mr. Spatz's character. His appearance is as a short-haired, black and white, tuxedo kitty, which some people may consider a rather generic appearance for a cat. I assure you, once you've known more than one tuxedo kitty you'll learn that no two are exactly alike, and Mr. Spatz will have his uniqueness as well.
So, are the kitties in my books based on the kitties in my life? Well, yes....and no.
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Taken By The Huntsman on Ask David! :-)
Hey all,
Here's a new page about my Taken By The Huntsman:
http://askdavid.com/reviews/book/fantasy-romance/9806
I would deeply appreciate it if you would check it out and give it some love!
Thank you so much!!!
Here's a new page about my Taken By The Huntsman:
http://askdavid.com/reviews/book/fantasy-romance/9806
I would deeply appreciate it if you would check it out and give it some love!
Thank you so much!!!
Book 2 (In Progress) Chapter One (Subject To Revision ;-) )
Chapter One
Roni was in trouble and she knew it. This wasn't an unusual
condition for her. As a con artist and petty thief by profession, she often
found herself on the wrong side of the law; and, so, in trouble. But this time
the men who were chasing her wouldn't read her rights and lock her up if they
caught her. No, this time the end of the chase would be far more violent. Roni
knew this and knew that because of this she had to make sure they didn't catch
her, which she was trying desperately to do. If only she hadn't put on the damn
high heels when she left home earlier!
She had worn the heels because she knew how important it was
to look one's best; especially for one with her vocation. Roni barely cracked
five feet tall in her stocking feet and wearing the highest of high heels was
just one of the ways she manipulated people's impressions of her. Besides, they
made her legs look longer and her butt look good. But, unfortunately, none of
that changed the fact that they were very difficult to run fast in!
It all started when she'd found herself short of money for
her rent and had tried to throw a quick con together so she wouldn't be evicted
from her rat-trap apartment. She was
new to the city and hadn't learned who all of the major players in the underworld
were yet. She'd had to leave her last
city of residence rather precipitously, and so she hadn't had time to do her
usual amount of homework.
Roni wasn't classically beautiful, and was far too
voluptuous to be fashionably beautiful, but she'd found that there were always
men who'd follow her wicked curves around anywhere she'd cared to lead
them. Her tits and ass coupled with her
unusual complexion served to keep men guessing; which, of course, kept them
interested. Roni's parents had both
been of mixed race, though they refused to disclose what exactly those races
were; even to Roni.
She, herself, had no idea what parts of Earth she owed her
genetic heritage to, but she knew that the unusual mix of features and the
indeterminate skin tone she had been blessed with made it possible for her to
be a veritable chameleon. A simple
change of clothing and slightly different shades of makeup and she could change
her appearance dramatically. Was her
skin a lovely creamy cocoa a la Halle Berry?
Or was she a tan Malibu beach bunny?
Or perhaps she was a descendant of the place that had once been commonly
referred to as 'the Orient?' She'd never tell. Throw in some hair dye or a wig
and she could be a completely different person.
Her current predicament stemmed from her most recent
mark. He had seemed like any average
Joe and she had picked him out almost immediately from all of the possible
suckers who had been at the club she'd ventured into earlier to ply her trade. He hadn't been very attractive, but he
hadn't been impossibly ugly either.
He'd obviously had money, but he hadn't seemed to be rich enough to have
the money to be a problem later. In
short, he'd seemed perfect, and he'd responded beautifully to the scam she'd
run on him. How was she supposed to
know he was the local gang leader's brother?!?
He hadn't dressed with the ostentatious flair that most of
the successful criminals favored. He
hadn't seemed to have an entourage or any 'security' with him. His face had been open, and rather guileless;
not the hardened, cynical expression most people who spent time with the
less-than-pure-as-the-driven-snow elements of a city usually developed. He hadn't had any of the normal signs that
would have warned her away.
She had given him a professional evaluation before she'd
even approached him, and he'd seemed like a very safe target. The only thing that would have made him more
perfect would have been for him to keep his wallet in an easily accessible
pocket. Then she would have dispensed
with the whole charade and just light-fingered herself into solvency. Unfortunately, he'd been savvier than that
and had kept his wallet buttoned up in an inside pocket at the front of the
sport jacket he'd been wearing. She'd
been able to see the outline of the wallet from across the room, but knew she'd
have to get up-close and personal to have a chance at relieving him of it.
She'd begun by dancing her way through the crowded club
towards him. She knew the second he
noticed her; she had felt the way his eyes caressed her body. Once he'd finished studying her breasts in
her low-cut dress he'd raised his eyes to her face and she'd met them with
hers. Her 'come-hither' smile had him following
his dick straight to her side and from there it had been easy.
He'd bought her drinks which she'd pretended to drink and
she had acted progressively more intoxicated as the night progressed. As she
swayed her body in time to the music she had moved closer to her target, and
when she suggested they find someplace more private to get to know each other
he'd been all too willing. Once he'd
taken her to his apartment, it had been easy to get him out of his coat and to
convince him that she just had to have one more drink to calm her
nerves. After all, the thought of being
with someone as handsome as him just had her poor, little head in a spin. He'd swallowed it hook, line, and sinker and
had left the room to get a bottle of 'the good stuff.'
Naturally he hadn't put his jacket back on just to go to the
kitchen and she'd been able to nick his wallet out of his pocket and silently
depart via the window and fire escape.
That's when she'd realized her mistake.
As she'd climbed down the fire escape she'd noticed that the
outside of the building was crawling with just the type of 'security' that had
been notably absent from the club.
Fortunately, she'd seen them before they saw her and she'd been able to
slip away, but she had heard them talking about their chief, the city's top
crime boss, and how they hated babysitting his brother, and she'd known it
wouldn't be long before they'd be on her trail.
She hadn't even made it back to her tiny apartment before
she'd noticed them shadowing her. She
had considered just making a break for it, but she'd wanted to collect some
personal items before she skipped town (again) and had thought she'd be able to
give them the slip. She'd made it to
her place and had managed to throw most of what she wanted to take with her
into a duffle bag, but before she'd had a chance to change clothes and alter
her appearance she'd seen them circling the building. Not wanting to be trapped in her apartment, she'd made her way to
the roof and had been able to jump the short space between her building and the
building next to it.
Roni had been able to make her way back to the street and
away from her apartment, but the part of the city she was in didn't give her
many options for losing herself at that time of night. The streets were deserted and the few
businesses in the area had long since closed and locked up tight. Even the clubs and the bars had closed down
and the local drunks had made their ways home to escape the winter chill. Everything was still and silent and
deceptively peaceful.
The cold winter wind cut through her thin club-wear like a
knife and the click-clacking her high heels made against the pavement was
painfully loud in her ears; she felt horribly exposed out on the open street.
Convinced she was being watched, she ducked down a side street and hurried
through the narrow alley as quickly as she could. When she'd reached the other side she turned and saw the outlines
of four men following her. Knowing
she'd been right and that stealth was pointless at that point, she'd run as
fast as she could and had zig-zagged through a number of smaller streets and
alley-ways.
She'd finally found a building with an unlocked door and had
ducked inside and closed the door behind her just before the men who were
chasing her had turned the corner. She
knew they were right behind her and she looked around desperately for a place
to hide. The room she was in seemed to
be some kind of warehouse and there were boxes and equipment stacked around at
what seemed to be random intervals. She
dashed into the maze of odds and ends and found a small, concealed space that
she thought she could hide in.
Just as Roni found her hiding space she heard the door open
and the footsteps of the men following her.
They knew they had her cornered and didn't seem to be in any hurry as
they split up to search through all of the junk scattered around. It would only be a matter of time before
they found her; there was no where for her to go.
As Roni scrunched down into her hiding place, she wished,
not for the first time, that she could just give the wretched wallet back, but
she knew that would be pointless. Roni
knew exactly what type of men she was dealing with, and she knew they would not
be willing to just forgive and forget.
If they caught her she'd be lucky to escape with her life, and if they
did kill her she was sure she'd be wishing for her death long before it came.
One of the men passed close by the place Roni was hiding and
she tried to quietly snuggle deeper into the small cavity. As she did, she realized she was sharing the
space with a half-grown, black and white, short-haired kitten. The animal was regarding her with wide eyes
and just as she started praying it would remain silent it let out an
ear-piercing yowl and jumped into her arms.
Roni jumped up out of her hiding place with her duffle bag
still slung around her back and the small cat still in her arms and she ran as
fast as she could for the far side of the room. The men had all started to converge on her position as soon as
the kitten had given her away and were close behind her. As she ran for all she was worth, Roni
tripped over some debris on the floor and began to fall towards a dark spot on
the wall.
Expecting to hit the wall hard, and unable to put her hands
out to catch herself without dropping the cat, she turned to take the impact on
her back instead of on her face. She
was astonished when she kept falling, and falling, and falling. She looked back up to see that the light
from the warehouse seemed to be getting very far away and that the four men who
had been chasing her were also falling down the same hole she seemed to be in.
It seemed to Roni that she had been falling for quite a
while, and she was beginning to wonder when she'd land, and if she'd survive
when she did, when she was suddenly caught in a vortex. The cyclone took her breath away and ripped
the kitten from her grasp. She had just
long enough to worry about the poor creature before the lack of oxygen stole
her consciousness and everything went black.
...
Roni slowly came back to herself and the first thing she
realized was that the air was no longer cold and biting; it was warm and
wet. She opened her eyes and discovered
that she was laying on a leaf-strewn ground and that it was daylight instead of
nighttime. She wondered how long she'd
been unconscious.
As she took stock of herself and found that her limbs all
seemed to be in working order and that her duffle bag had miraculously remained
strapped to her back, she looked at her surroundings and saw that she seemed to
be in the middle of a jungle. There
were trees all around her which seemed to disappear into a sky that she could
only catch glimpses of through the green canopy above her. Close to the ground, the trunks of the trees
were as big around as a small car and there also seemed to be quite a few
bushes, vines, and creeping vegetation scattered in places where there were
breaks in the towering foliage.
Roni stood up and slowly dusted herself off, continuing to
stare in amazement at the verdant wonderland around her. The cat was no where to be seen but the four
men had made the journey to wherever they were with her. None of them were awake yet, fortunately,
and as she continued to look she saw that one of them would never wake
again.
One of the men was lying next to a tree that seemed to be
oozing a golden, viscous substance from its roots. The man's head and shoulders were already encased and the ooze
was slowly making its way down his body. It almost looked like he was being
encased in amber, but Roni had no interest in moving closer for a better
look. It was clear the man was dead,
but she still had three more to worry about and they were starting to stir.
Looking around for the cat one more time, and failing to
find him, Roni quickly started off into the jungle; seeking to put space
between herself and her pursuers. She
had to be careful about how she placed her feet in order to keep her heels from
sinking into the soft, moist ground.
More than once her shoes got stuck and she had to stop and free them
before she could continue. Because of
that she made much slower progress than she'd hoped and she began to worry that
it wouldn't take long for the men to catch up to her.
As if to confirm her fears, it wasn't long before she heard
her pursuers crashing through the underbrush and moving closer to her. She started to panic and looked around for
somewhere to hide. Unable to help
herself, she turned and looked over her shoulder and saw that one of the men
was nearly upon her.
Roni tried to stretch her legs to run faster but one of her
shoes caught again and she went sprawling on her face. The man chasing her
missed his grab at her when she fell, but turned to take advantage of her
helpless position. As she looked up,
expecting to feel his hands on her at any moment, she saw a blur of motion
approaching him from above.
While Roni looked on, a vine whipped out from the trees
above and severed the man's head. She
gasped as his head flew off into the underbrush and a second vine dropped down
to grab his body and quickly haul it up into the tree's branches. The whole procedure had happened between one
breath and the next and left Roni blinking in astonishment.
Scrambling to her feet, Roni desperately tried to avoid
looking at the place where the man's head had disappeared. She kept a wary eye on the branches overhead
as she scuttled underneath them to continue her flight from the remaining two
men. She could still hear them not far
away, and she didn't have time to contemplate the fate of the man who had
nearly caught her. She'd have to think
about that later.
As she ran she tried to keep an eye on the surrounding
forest as well as behind her for signs of pursuit. Her caution cost her speed, and it wasn't long before another one
of the men caught up to her. She looked
around for something to use as a weapon as he advanced on her. This man seemed to have learned from the
examples of his two unfortunate companions and kept part of his attention on
their surroundings, which slowed him down somewhat.
Roni picked up a stone she found lying on the ground near a
tree, intending to use it to defend herself, and was startled when it suddenly
sprouted a plethora of legs and began squirming and chittering at her
frantically. With a yelp she threw it away from herself, and it happened to
land on the leg of the man who was chasing her. They both watched in astonishment as rock-creature quickly
climbed to the top of the man's head and latched all of it's legs around the
man's cranium.
The man started screaming as if the rock-creature were
burning him and Roni, unable to help herself, raced over to try to help
him. The man was running in circles and
waving his arms around hysterically, and he knocked her several feet away from
him with his frantic flailing. Before
Roni could gather her feet under her again, she saw that the man was bleeding
badly.
The bleeding started underneath the rock-creature, from the
top of the man's head, but the man quickly began bleeding profusely from his
eyes, ears, and nose. Horror-struck,
Roni continued to watch as the man appeared to begin to melt. First his head seemed to deflate and sink
into itself, as if his skull had ceased to exist, then his neck sunk into his
chest and his chest seemed to melt down towards his feet. Mercifully, the man's gurgling screams ended
quickly, and it was only Roni who was left to be horrified as his bones seemed
to liquefy and what had once been a human being turned into a skin sack leaking
red, viscous fluid.
Once the man was a puddle of skin and goo on the ground, the
rock-creature settled in the middle of it and extended what looked like a straw
to Roni. It inserted the end of the
straw into the puddle and began making slurping sounds. Fighting her rising gorge, Roni ran off into
the forest.
Out of breath, Roni soon had to stop her headlong flight;
plus, it occurred to her that running blindly through the forest might not be
the best idea. It was clear to her that
she was either dreaming, dead, or someplace far from home. She immediately decided to operate under the
assumption that she was still alive (and not dead and in Hell), that she hadn't
lost her mind, and that she was awake.
This decision wasn't made because she was sure that all of these things
were true; she'd just decided that on the off chance that she was alive, awake,
and sane the best way to remain so was to act as if the dangers she perceived
were real. If it turned out that her
mind (either awake or asleep) was manufacturing nightmares for her to navigate
she didn't see how acting as if they were real would harm her in anyway, and if
she were dead she supposed she'd be beyond harm.
With that resolution in mind, Roni decided she needed to
either find her way out of the forest (and hopefully to somewhere safer) and/or
find people who could help her.
Considering what she had seen, climbing the trees to try to find out
where the edge of the forest was didn't seem like such a hot idea; so she
decided to just pick a direction (away from the last place she had seen the man
who was still chasing her) and go in as straight a line as possible. She couldn't hear the last of the men who
had been chasing her and she thought to wonder if he were already dead, but
erring on the side of caution seemed the better part of valor in this situation
and she started off into the forest again.
Just as she began to think she might be putting some real
distance between herself and the place where the third man had died, she heard
a plaintive mewing from nearby.
Sighing, but knowing she'd never be able to walk off and leave if the
kitten was near and needed her help, she started looking around; after all, she
considered herself at least partially responsible for the kitten being in
danger in the first place. It didn't
take her long to follow the crying and find the kitten. It was entangled in what appeared to be a web
of long, thin leaves.
On the ground in front of her, there was a plant that looked
like a giant, mutated tulip. It had
long, thin leaves and a central stalk with a blossom at the top; but instead of
standing up straight the leaves were woven into a cage, at the center of which
was a very frightened looking kitten.
She crouched down to get a better look.
The kitten didn't appear to be injured, just trapped.
Given what she had seen of the potential for violence among
the flora and fauna of this forest, Roni was rather reluctant to just stick her
hand into the tangle of leaves and try to pry the kitten out, so she began
looking around for something to use to move the leaves. First she had to be sure that whatever she
picked up wouldn't suddenly decide to eat her; it was a nerve-wracking process.
She finally found a stick that seemed both long and thick enough for the
purpose, and also seemed to be relatively inert.
She picked the stick up, keeping a wary eye on it, and began
to move back towards the plant that had trapped the kitten. It appeared as though the leaves were moving
closer together, trapping the kitten in an even smaller space. Worried that the kitten would either be
crushed or smothered, Roni began to hurry but was stopped as the kitten let out
an ear-piercing yowl at the same time something crashed through the brush
behind her.
Roni spun, raising the stick in front of herself, to face
the threat behind her. She saw the last
of the men who had been chasing her stumble out of the underbrush and fall on
his face on the ground. He lay there,
twitching, and then looked up at her, an expression of utter anguish on his
face. The man seemed to be trying to
speak, but no sound escaped his mouth.
Suddenly, he opened his mouth even wider and looked as if he were trying
to vomit.
Thousands of tiny, crawling creatures (distantly Roni's mind
tried to classify them as insects, though she knew she had nothing to base that
assumption on other than superficial appearance) came scuttling out of his
mouth. The man gave her an expression
of complete horror, and then his eyes rolled up into his head and he was still
except for the movement of the creatures.
Roni prepared to run, but the creatures didn't seem at all interested in
abandoning their meal, and were busily encasing the man's body in some kind of
web-like substance.
Trying to keep an eye on the mass of creeping creatures, she
turned back to the plant that had trapped the kitten. She could no longer see the animal, though she could hear his
mournful cries from inside the bundle of leaves. Poking the stick into the center of the tangle, she found the
leaves were difficult to move, and that they left marks on the stick as though
their edges were sharp. That knowledge
made Roni glad she hadn't just blindly plunged her hand into them, but she was
able to use the stick to make a large enough opening to stick her hand into and
grab the kitten.
As she pulled the kitten out, she found that there were
small vines wrapped around its back legs.
They didn't release it when she pulled it away from the plant, but she
dropped the stick and let the leaves close back together and the sharp edges
severed the vines. She was then able to
unwind them from its legs.
Roni looked the kitten over, but other than some lost fur
where the vines had wrapped its legs, it seemed none the worse for wear. She did notice during the course of her
inspection that it was a he. He didn't seem at all inclined to leave her arms
again, and he snuggled under her chin and purred. Even with the threat of the
men gone, Roni knew the forest itself was still a threat and she needed to get
out of it as soon as possible. Turning
to continue on her way, she found that she wasn't alone.
Between the trees, in the direction she had been headed
before she'd been distracted by her search for the kitten, stood a very tall
man with hair that was a blonde so yellow she doubted it was from nature. He was very well-built and muscular, and the
features of his face were stunning with large, purple eyes, high, sharp cheek
bones, and full, bowed lips. Roni
became lost in the beauty of his face for a moment, but soon realized that this
man might be the help she'd been looking for.
Just as she was about to speak to him an expression of
rage contorted his beautiful face and he raised his hand to point at her and
shouted in a language she'd never heard before. Afraid that the man meant to attack her, Roni spun, intending to
run away, but found that she was unable to move her feet!
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Poems About The Wild Hunt
These are a couple of poems I read before writing my novel, Taken By The Huntsman. They describe a couple of the legends associated with the Wild Hunt, and I thought the imagery they use was inspiring. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did.
http://klou.tt/vmsqthaidkq0
http://klou.tt/1m8r116d3ayp4
http://klou.tt/vmsqthaidkq0
http://klou.tt/1m8r116d3ayp4
Taken By The Huntsman: Chapter One
The bus pulled up to the curb with a tired-sounding wheeze
and Cassie looked at the driver, waiting for him to unlock the back door. He took a minute to fiddle with his radio
but finally pushed the button opening the door, and the heavy summer air hit
Cassie as she stepped onto the sidewalk.
There had been storms earlier in the evening and the ground seemed to be
trying to give back all of the water it had taken. At 3am the sky was clear, but the air was still warm and wet just
waiting for tomorrow’s sun to generate another storm.
Cassie listened to the bus rattle off down the street as she
looked around at her neighborhood. At
this hour she was the only one on the street, but the evidence from the day’s
activities was all around her. She
sighed, it seemed as though every summer people became more and more careless
of their trash. Soda cans and beer
bottles were almost as numerous as cigarette butts. Children, seeing the lack of concern over littering from their
parents, had left their ice cream wrappers and Popsicle sticks wherever they happened
to have been when they finished their treats.
Waste from dogs (and perhaps even humans in a couple of cases) lay in
piles on the sidewalk leaving its odor in the oppressive heat. Cassie sighed again, she understood people
needing to get out of small, non-air conditioned apartments in the heat of the
summer, but she didn’t understand why that always seemed to translate into
turning the neighborhood they all shared into a landfill. She pulled out some plastic bags and put on
some disposable gloves and started picking up the garbage that was along her
route home. It wouldn't be necessary
for her to carry anything very far; the neighborhood had a sufficient number of
street-side garbage cans. None of them
were more than half full.
As she tried not to think about what she was picking up,
Cassie thought about the argument she’d had with her boss just before she left
her 12-hour shift at the call center.
Her boss had pulled her into his office to lecture her about the amount
of time she was spending on the calls she took. She had tried to explain to him that she was only trying to
listen to the customers to make sure she fully understood their problems and so
would be in the best position to try to help them. She knew that most of her coworkers held the customers in
contempt but she had taken the job as a customer service representative and so
was trying her best to help customers.
Many times she had been able to make customers happy just by listening
to them and showing some concern over whatever had upset them enough to
call. So many of the people who called
her were just lonely people who wanted someone to talk to, someone who would
listen and show some interest in their problems. But waiting for customers to finish expressing themselves and
then finding a solution that both satisfied them and conformed to the company’s
policies took time. Her customers
nearly always (sometimes it was impossible to please people no matter what you
did) ended the phone call feeling satisfied and as though the company she
worked for actually cared if they were happy with the products and services
they purchased.
Her boss had curtly informed her that the goal of customer
service was not to serve customers but to get them off the phone quickly. He told her the company was obligated to
provide some outlet for people to complain, but that her job was to move those
complaints through as fast as possible. It wasn’t necessary to make everyone
happy, just try not to piss them off so much that they’d want to complain to someone
higher up. Her boss went on to explain
that while her customer satisfaction scores were fine, that wouldn’t be enough
for her to get a raise, or even secure her job, she needed to improve her
turn-around time on calls. He then
reiterated that her job was to take calls quickly, not make people happy. How depressing!
At 28 years old Cassie was still trying to find her niche in
the world. She had worked at many
menial jobs, the call center was just the latest, trying to find something she
could tolerate until she could earn enough money to go to school. She was trying to save enough so that she
could afford to finish a degree (not just start one) without taking on any
debt. The problem was that tuition kept
going up while her salaries did not. She’d tried working as a retail clerk at a clothing store, as a
waitress, as a cleaning woman, and most recently as a customer service
representative. At all of these jobs
she’d been informed that she didn’t have the drive to do well. That her
dedication to doing the job well, while admirable, was not what management
wanted; management wanted fast not good.
She’d had people tell her over the years just to give it up and borrow
money to get an education, but she had never owed anyone anything and she
wasn’t interested in starting now.
Besides, she still wasn’t entirely sure what she wanted to study.
Most of Cassie’s off hours (of which there weren’t many)
were spent at the public library. She
and most of the librarians were on a first-name basis because they often helped
her explore her latest topic of interest.
Cassie was interested in just about every subject she had read about, so
she was having trouble narrowing it down to just one subject to study. Her passion, if she had to pick one, was
helping others. She had hoped the call
center would help her fulfill that need, but apparently not. From everything she had read about careers
that focus on helping others (social worker, school teacher, police officer,
councilor, etc.) they also focused on speed over thoroughness, and she didn’t
think spending years and tens of thousands of dollars to be just as frustrated
as she was now sounded like a good idea.
So Cassie planned to keep working and saving and hoping she’d figure out
what her calling was one day.
As Cassie picked up a dirty diaper that someone had left
lying next to a garbage can instead of in it, she realized she’d reached the
point on her walk home where she needed to make a decision. She could either continue on for another two
blocks and cross over to her street via an open, well-lit thoroughfare and then
have to walk back two blocks to her building, or she could cut through the
narrow, dark alley she was standing next to now and save herself four blocks
(and about ten minutes) of walking. She
knew the alley was often a hiding place for thieves and other criminals, but
the streets were so empty at the moment, except for her, and she only had about
five hours before she’d have to go out again to her second job as a barmaid. She was tired and she thought it would be
safe enough to take the shortcut at 3am because the criminals were normally
home in bed by that time (she hoped).
Cassie looked around one more time and saw nobody; she heard nothing
except for the normal hum of traffic a few blocks away on the highway and the
electrical buzz of the street lamps.
She took a breath and decided to risk it, she really did need to get
home and get some sleep.
…
The Erlking had left Faerie for the human world, something
he hadn’t done in decades and didn’t do lightly now, to hunt the one who had
killed a pixie child named Coel. The
Wild Hunt (also known as the Wild Horde among the Fae) often punished murderers
(as well as oath breakers, liars, and others who committed crimes against the
goddess) but catching a child-slayer had special meaning. Children were revered among the Fae
(probably because they had so few) so when Aeronwen, Coel’s mother, spilled her
own blood and called for vengeance against Griogal (the male Sidhe who’s suit
she had rejected and who had murdered her son out of spite) the Erlking
responded immediately. He had reviewed
the evidence against Griogal and found it more than sufficient. No one called the Wild Hunt lightly because
if the evidence didn’t support the charge, or the offense was not great enough
to warrant a punishment by the Hunt, the one whose blood had called them would
be punished instead, and the Erlking was the sole judge, jury, and sometimes
executioner when the Hunt was called.
Even more so than the US Supreme Court, the Erlking decided which calls
to heed and his judgment was final, no appeal possible.
In this case the Erlking had heard Aeronwen’s call for
vengeance against Griogal for the crime of child-slaying and had traveled to
the scene of the crime immediately. The
ability to instantly appear to a caller was a power that was unique to him, as
far as the Erlking knew, and was one he only possessed when a call for
vengeance was released onto the wind with blood. He could carry any or all (as he chose) of the rest of the Horde
with him to the initial call, but the rest of the hunt had to proceed by other
means of travel.
When the Erlking and his Horde appeared at Aeronwen’s side
she accused Griogal and her accusation was supported by two other witnesses who
had seen Griogal cast a spell of fire against Coel. The Fae were very hard to kill but a magical fire was one of the
few things that could accomplish the task, especially with a child who would
not have grown into his own magical protections yet. The Erlking cast his own spell of revealing which did indeed show
that Griogal had used magic fire to murder Coel. With the charge being child-slaying and the guilt of the Sidhe
proven beyond any doubt the Erlking had immediately started the hunt for
Griogal.
Coel had been loved within his community (as any child would
be) but even those who had never met him refused to shelter Griogal. People were rarely willing to risk the wrath
of the Wild Hunt, for to interfere with the Hunt was to be magically compelled
to join it and the duration of the service was entirely at the discretion of
the Huntsman who was always the Erlking.
However, it was also rare that there would be any who would be willing
to aid the Hunt. Usually nothing could compel the residents of Fairie to draw
the attention of the Wild Hunt except the most urgent and righteous need for
vengeance. In this case, with a child-slayer the focus of the Hunt, the Fae had
not only refused to hide Griogal, they had left signs to direct the Hunt to
places Griogal found to hide himself.
With the act of murdering Coel, Griogal had literally left himself with
nowhere to hide. In fact, the Erlking
would have long ago caught Griogal except for the fact that he had escaped to
the human world.
The human world was fraught with peril, more so now than in
older times. The humans had dirtied
their world to the point that the air was dangerous to breathe and the water
not fit to drink. They had covered
whole swaths of land with tar and metal and other artificial things so that
nothing natural could grow in those places.
There had always been risk in entering the human world, any manmade
metal could poison a Fae if it broke the skin and some Fae would even be burned
by touching such materials. These were
the reasons the Fae’s deadliest swords and spears had always been made from
manmade metal, but never had it been so dangerous as it had become in recent
years with humanity’s enormous increase in numbers and apparent determination
to destroy their world. Humans were
still susceptible to Fae glamour (the ability to change appearance or to become
invisible) though the Erlking was not sure what (if anything) would show on
their recording devices, so he was concealing his Hunt while he searched for
Griogal. In ancient times, if the Hunt
had revealed itself in the human world the humans who saw it went mad. The appearance of some members of the Hunt
was so fearsome as to make it impossible for an unshielded human mind to
survive an encounter with them without breaking. The Erlking was worried about what might happen if a modern human
happened to see them. Would they also
go mad or had humanity lost too much innocence for that?
It was the recording devices that the Erlking really worried
about. If humanity saw proof of the existence of the Fae would they try to find
the entrance to Fairie? Would they
succeed? Humans had worshipped the Fae
at one point in history but had forgotten them in more recent times except for
old stories which were dismissed as imagination. If the humans realized that those stories were real what would
they do? The Erlking tried to dismiss
these concerns as questions for another day; he had a child-slayer to
catch. It was a testament to Griogal’s
desperation that it would even occur to him to try to flee to the human world.
Of course those hunted by the Wild Horde were nearly always
desperate (the punishments devised by the Erlking were the stuff of legend) and
Griogal was not the first Fae to run to the humans to hide. It was more common in times gone by, but
even more recently there had been some Fae who had tried to hide with the
humans. The magic held by most Fae made
it possible for them to hide their true natures behind glamour and in some
cases to amass wealth of the kind recognized by humans. In past times, some of the Fae the Erlking
hunted would try to blend in with a human community and sometimes they even
succeeded for a time. In more recent
times this happened less frequently because of how polluted the human world had
become. A full-grown Fae could not die
of thirst or starvation, but they could suffer from them. As dirty as the human world had become, it
was almost impossible to find food or water that was not contaminated with the
very manmade substances that would poison a Fae so trying to survive for any
length of time in such an environment was not a happy prospect.
The Erlking was not compelled to run a target to the ground
before he could leave a hunt, but he had made it a point of pride to do so
unless called to another hunt.
Considering the fate that awaited those who were hunted by the Erlking
the Fae were usually careful about committing the types of crimes for which he
could be called, but with all of Fairie to care for it was certainly not
unheard of for one hunt to be interrupted by a call for another. If such a thing happened, and the Erlking
elected to respond to the second call, then he left his second in command,
Ionhar (a skilled hunter and expert archer), to continue the hunt while the
Erlking responded to the second call and decided which hunt took
precedence. Lately, however, the
Erlking had not been pursuing his targets into the human world because they
usually returned to Fairie so quickly, but had just been waiting near the
portal the target had taken out of Fairie for their return.
Millennia ago the Erlking had cast a spell on all of the
portals of Fairie so that he would know if one he chased passed through to the
human world or back from the human world to Fairie. The portals were difficult to find in the human world unless you
knew exactly where they were, so it was unusual for a Fae to return to Fairie
through any portal except the one through which they left. The risk of entering the human world was not
justified when it was so easy for the Erlking to track his prey’s movements
into and out of Fairie, so he had not been entering the human world in recent
years. Griogal, however, had entered
the human world and had stayed there for quite some time, and with the crime of
child-slaying to avenge it had become worth the risk for the Erlking to take
his Hunt into the human world. The
Erlking did not know how Griogal was surviving in a world so saturated with
toxins, but he would find him no matter how cold the trail.
The Erlking sat upon
his each-uisge (a Fae horse that is wild in nature and known for tearing
would-be riders to pieces, especially if the horse-like creatures caught a
whiff of the sea air of their native lands), Uasail, a great black beast with
eyes that flickered with red and blue flames, wearing his battle armor. Together they were a frightening sight. The each-uisge had once been dubbed the
“hell horse,” though the Fae had nothing to do with a Christian heaven or hell
(they were much older than that) and stood half as high again as a human draft
horse. The hooves on the ends of his
six legs, which he stamped on the ground hard enough to draw sparks, were made
of some type of hard, black, shiny stone.
One might guess they were obsidian, which would seem to fit with the
creature’s fiery nature, but they were much harder and less brittle than that,
though they were as sharp as a razor blade and could slice a foe’s flesh from
their bones. His mouth was full of
razor teeth more like what one would find in the mouth of an earthly tiger than
in the mouth of a vegetarian horse.
Periodically the animal would snort flames from his nostrils and smoke
would waft from his ears. Having those
flickering eyes turned on them had been enough to make battle-hardened Fae
freeze in terror.
The Erlking himself was an imposing presence. In his battle armor he stood nearly seven
feet tall. The spiked armor was black
and shiny, like the exoskeleton of some prehistoric insect, and the enormous
helmet he wore had a visor with the snarling visage of a wild boar and two sets
of antlers coming out of the top like the rack of some great stag. Outside his armor the Erlking’s appearance
was not much more comforting. He stood six and a half feet tall with a wild
mass of red and gold hair that seemed to shimmer with its own internal
flame. His eyes were a brilliant deep
green, like living emeralds, but so cold as to make one think that the stones
they resembled had taken their place on his face. He was a handsome man with high, chiseled cheekbones and pale,
luminescent skin, his muscles were developed and hardened from millennia of
hunting and battle. He did not fall
into any category of Fae; he was not Sidhe or Pixie or Goblin or Brownie or
Blue Man or Spriggan or Elf or Giant or Leprechaun, he was the Erlking.
There were very few Fae who were a kind unto themselves, not
falling into any other category and not a lingering remnant of a nearly extinct
race, but the Erlking was one. Most of
the others, such as the Morrigan, were deities in the past whose powers had faded
as their worshipers decreased. The
Erlking was unique in that from the time he came into existence he was who and
what he currently was.
All of Fairie feared the Erlking, from the monarchs of the
Season Courts to the smallest of the Goblins.
The Erlking could not hunt a Fae unless they committed some
transgression against another, but he did decide which transgressions were
worth punishing and which were not.
While his usual practice was to wait until he received a call for
vengeance, he was not bound to do so.
If the Erlking witnessed a wrong for which he wished to bring justice he
was free to do so, and who could know when he would choose to watch? To offend
the Erlking was to draw his attention, and the Fae were very long-lived
creatures. In such a long time who
would be able to keep from transgressing against anyone? Yes, the Erlking’s powers were limited by
the condition that he must punish a wrong, but that condition did not stipulate
that he couldn’t search for a wrong to punish or that the punishment had to be
in proportion to the wrong.
The Erlking was aware of the awe in which the rest of Fairie
held him and he occasionally used it to his advantage (especially when dealing
with the monarchs of the Season Courts), but for the most part he tried to
avoid abusing his power. After several
hundred thousand years of existence the Erlking was lonely and did not want to
drive other Fae further away from him.
His position as the personification of vengeance required a certain
ruthlessness, which he could display when needed, but he had no need to be so
ruthless in all of his personal dealings and he chose to be temperate when he
could.
His current task, that of hunting Griogal, was not suited
for temperance, but he was having a hard time bringing the ruthlessness of
which he was capable to bear; he could not find Griogal! Somehow the Sidhe had
managed to cover his tracks in the filth of this human world and the Erlking
was having a hard time figuring out how.
The Erlking had been on this hunt for longer than any other in recent
memory and had ignored a couple of other calls to the Hunt (none were of as
serious a nature as child-slaying). He was growing tired of this hunt, the
human world was no place for self-respecting Fae and he wanted to return to
Fairie. Some of the members of his
Horde who were more reliant on the magic of Fairie had already been sent back
to Fairie to avoid the risk of them dying from the human poison that was
everywhere in the human world. What
sustained the Erlking now was the thought of what he would do to Griogal when
he caught him; there were few things more satisfying than bringing justice for
the death of a child.
Something pulled at the Erlking’s attention but he knew it
was not Griogal so he tried to ignore it.
He needed to be focused and catch this bastard! The same thing had been pulling at the
Erlking for several days now, but he could not determine why anything not
related to the hunt would be vying for his attention at a time like this and so
he’d been trying to push it away. Now,
though, it was closer and the pull had strengthened to a compulsion, the
Erlking could not ignore it any longer.
He called Ionhar to him and told him to continue tracking the last few
leads they had found, and to summon him if Griogal’s trail was found. Ionhar nodded to acknowledge his lord’s
instructions, but did not question the Erlking about where he was going.
The Erlking, still in glamour and mounted on Uasail,
followed the pull to a dark, garbage strewn alley. There was nothing there!
Just the detritus left by the human inhabitants of the area and one
small, human woman. His attention was
drawn to the woman as she made her way around the obstacles made by the piles
of trash in the alley. She seemed
nervous, as though she feared being attacked, but he didn’t know why since
(other than him) she was the only one in the alley.
He continued to watch her. She was very small for a human,
he doubted she was much taller than five feet and she was very slender, though
her breasts filled the strange thin shirt she wore very nicely. He thought he could see the outline of
another garment underneath the thin shirt and wondered if it was there to help
conceal such treasure or if it was there to make it appear as though her body
was different than it was. It had been
several decades since he’d seen a human up close but he remembered they were
fond of such deceptions. Her hair was
straight as a ribbon and black as the velvet night. It fell in a shining wave to her small waist and light reflected
from it as though it were the finest silk.
He felt the strongest desire to run his hand through it to see if it
felt as soft as it looked and marveled at himself; he’d never been drawn to a
human before! He felt compelled to
discover the color of her eyes and directed Uasail to move around her.
He was careful to make sure that neither he nor his mount
touched her. She wouldn’t have felt it
if they had, not with glamour as strong as his, but she already appeared so
apprehensive it seemed cruel to do anything that would infringe upon her
space. He leaned down to look into her
face as she passed and it hit him: the Siorghra, literally, 'eternal love,' the
bond between Fae who were Anamchara (soul mates). He’d heard of it, of course, all Fae knew of the Siorghra and
hoped one day to feel its sweet sting, but after so long? And with a human? Impossible! He had never
heard of a Fae finding their Anamchara in a human, not in all the millennia of
his existence. Long ago some of the Fae
had kidnapped humans and brought them to Fairie as mates or as servants, but
even in the cases when the Fae and the human had felt the deepest of love for
each other he had never heard of them forming the Siorghra. And yet it was unmistakable.
The Erlking looked into the human woman’s eyes, blue eyes
that sparkled like the darkest sapphires, and felt a devotion unlike any he had
ever felt in his very long life. His
connection to this woman, who he had never even spoken to, was stronger even
than his connection to the Wild Hunt.
He hadn’t even thought that possible!
He thought to wonder if this was some sort of spell cast by Griogal to
distract him from the hunt, but no, Griogal was Sidhe and it was Pixies who had
power for love and lust charms. No
Pixie would aid one who had slain one of their children and even if they would,
no love charm could be mistaken for the Siorghra. Dea Matrona (the great mother goddess) had created the Siorghra
so that the Fae would always know when they had found their perfect match; she
had made it so that all Fae would instantly know what it was when they felt
it. She would never allow a cretin like
Griogal to pervert such a magic for his own petty uses. No, this woman must truly be his Anamchara.
There was no question in the Erlking’s mind about what must
be done next. All Fae only ever
received one Anamchara; he could not possibly leave her in the human
world. Aside from all of the perils she
would face as part of her human existence, just being his Anamchara would make
her a target for his enemies…and he had many enemies. Several hundred thousand years as the final arbiter of Fairie had
resulted in more than one Fae holding a grudge against him; and along with
their very long lives Fae had very long memories. The Erlking himself was impervious to injury (both physical and
magical) and had survived blows that would have killed any other Fae. On one occasion an opponent in battle had
managed to strike off his head, which would have been a mortal blow for any
other Fae, but the Erlking had just picked up his head and carried it under his
arm while he cut his opponent down. He
had heard this had given rise to a human legend called 'The Headless
Horseman.' But the woman was human, she
did not have his resistance to death and so he would need to make sure she was
protected at all times.
He would need to
immediately take her and bring her to his fortress in Fairie. There only those who were oath bound to him
would have access to her. It was
possible for a Fae to break an oath, of course, but if they did so they were
subject to vengeance from the Wild Hunt.
Thus far none had ever broken an oath to the Erlking. Aside from that, he had only ever brought those
he trusted to want to remain loyal to him into his personal service. Over the
years he had compelled certain targets of the hunt into one form of service or
another, but never to serve within his personal strong-hold. As liege lords went, the Erlking was
considered a good one, always fair and generous with his people, as long as one
didn’t cross him, and many of the Fae came to his service quite willingly. The Erlking always protected what was his
and everyone in his service could depend on that protection. Fairie could be a dangerous place for those
without strong kin or strong magic. The
Erlking was quite selective about which calls to the Hunt he responded to, and
often the only protection the Fae had from other Fae was what they could
provide themselves or what their kin would provide. To be in the service of the Erlking was to be protected.
The Erlking immediately laid a spell of claiming on the
woman (something that all other Fae would see and recognize) which she remained
completely oblivious to, and thought about how best to bring her to Fairie
without frightening her too badly. It
had been centuries since most humans had believed that the Fae were more than
stories to charm or frighten children, so it was unlikely she would take it
well if he simply revealed himself and Uasail.
He could use a glamour to appear human and walk around the corner of the
alley on his own feet so that she would see him and believe he was just another
human using the alley to travel, but he couldn’t see how that would help him
convince her to return with him to Fairie.
No, the only solution he could see that would get her to Fairie quickly
(and time was of the essence, he had a hunt to return to after all) was to put
her in an enchanted sleep and kidnap her.
He would have to leave her in his castle and hope he would be able to
return before she woke from her sleep.
She wouldn’t be harmed, the magic sleep would make her
feel stronger and better rested than she had felt in years, but he was pretty
sure she’d be angry. If he remembered
correctly, the last time he was in the human world the trend had been for women
to take umbrage if men tried to force their will on them. He doubted that trend had reversed itself to
when women were more biddable to the commands of men, so he would just hope
that he would eventually be able to convince her to forgive him. He planned to spoil her more than even the
monarchs of the Season Courts were spoiled and to offer her the kind of safety
seldom known in Fairie or the human world, and once she was in Fairie she would
cease to age (all humans who were brought to Fairie became as long-lived as the
Fae as long as they stayed in Fairie).
Surely all of that would be worth forgiving him for one kidnapping? He hoped.
He took one more breath and cast the sleeping spell.
Taken by the Huntsman
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