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KND Freebies: Bestselling epic fantasy THE WIZARD AND THE WARLORD by M.R. Mathias is featured in today’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

Kindle Store Fantasy Bestseller
in Magic & Wizards and Fairy Tales…
plus 91 rave reviews!
Get ready for the gripping conclusion of the inspired epic fantasy, The Wardstone Trilogy,
as the “top-rate storytelling”  and appealing characters continue to captivate readers…
4.5 stars – 102 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

The Wizard and the Warlord is the gripping conclusion to the epic fantasy Wardstone Trilogy that M. R. Mathias wrote in a Texas prison.

This compelling volume brings the elves, dwarves, giants, and the dragons into the story again as our heroes, led by High King Mikahl and the great wizard Hyden Hawk, are forced to fight for the fate of the Kingdoms. This time, they do so against the terrible creature that Gerard Skyler has become, and the legions of demon-beasts that he commands.

5-star praise from Amazon readers:

A rousing finish!
“…M.R. Mathias has done it again, creating a fantastic tale that will stand up proudly next to the classics of Tolkien and Martin…I highly recommend this trilogy of novels.”

Amazing conclusion
“…packed full of fighting and magic….I was sorry to see that last page finally turn, even if it was a fitting end to an amazing series.”

Fantastic!
“…M.R. Mathias is a master at his craft. His characters were off the page real, along with the entire world he created…”

an excerpt from

The Wizard & The Warlord

by M.R. Mathias

 

Copyright © 2013 by M.R. Mathias and published here with his permission

Chapter 4

The light that carried through the sea into the Serpent’s Eye from outside was fading as the tide rose. Phen cast a spell. A small sphere of light the size of an apple appeared in his open palm then slowly rose and hovered at a point about a foot over his head. He looked around the cavern. Oarly was standing with his feet planted. He was weaving slightly to and fro with the slack bow line of the dinghy held loosely in his hand. Most of his bulbous face was buried in his tangled beard.

“Oarly,” Phen said a little loudly. “Tie the line around that stalagmite and let’s make ready.”

The dwarf jumped at the mention of his name, as if he’d been in a daze, but after a snarl he settled back into his standing stupor. Phen huffed with frustration and then bent down and picked up a loose pebble. He threw it rather hard and it bounced off the side of Oarly’s head. The impact sounded like the thump of a ripe melon. Oarly rubbed the spot absently and sneered at Phen. Three heartbeats later the hairy stump took a step back and yelped loudly. “By Doon, lad,” Oarly rubbed his head briskly now. “What was that for?”

“You’re drunk,” Phen returned. “Now tie off the skiff.”

“I’m not even close to drunk, lad,” Oarly boasted as he finally tied the line. When he stood back up he pulled his axe from his back and puffed his wide chest out. “Now where’s this serpent?”

Phen made an expression of pure terror and pointed beyond Oarly into the darkness. “It’s… It’s right behind you.” His voice was trembling with fear.

Oarly looked at him for a long moment and then let out a huff. “Bah! You’ll not get this dwarf that easily.”

Phen smirked and grabbed a burlap sack out of the boat. Oarly glanced back over his shoulder, just in case.

The natural-formed cave looked much the same as it had the last time they’d been in it. The large, rough chamber had two passages leading up and away from the sea pool that took up nearly half of its rocky bottom.

Phen started down the smaller right-hand tunnel. As soon as he was a dozen paces ahead, Oarly pulled a new flask from his boot and took a deep swig. Phen just laughed at him and carried on. A wave made a loud smacking-sucking sound against the rocks as the tide side seal broke in a wave’s valley. Phen laughed because the sound sent Oarly stumbling quickly to catch up with him.

The narrow tunnel was about a hundred paces deep. Phen knelt at the end of it, looking curiously at the ancient skeleton on the floor. It was that of the elf he called Loak, whose ring and journal had helped Phen track down and destroy the Silver Skull of Zorellin.

He thought about all that had led to his being turned into a statue. Only Claret’s powerful magic had prevented him from remaining an immobile monument for eternity. He and the dragon had more or less saved the day at the battle of O’Dakahn. Phen achieved his goal of becoming a hero like Hyden Hawk and King Mikahl, though he hated passionately the name he’d earned for himself. He hadn’t ever intended to be known to the people of the realm as the Marble Boy. Oarly wouldn’t let him forget the title.

Phen couldn’t wait to get his pigment back. He hoped that Claret’s suspicions about the pool in the Giant Mountains were founded. It was a long and treacherous journey to undertake, and there was no certainty it would help, but it was a risk he was willing to chance. He would do anything to rid himself of the stony skin, and the title Marble Boy, and besides that, he just wanted to be plain old Phen again.

“All right, ease back to where we can see the entry chamber,” he said. “Once the serpent slithers out to feed, I’ll put on the ring and go get the emerald. Then I’ll come back here.” He squeezed past Oarly and started back out of the tunnel. “All you have to do is warn me if the serpent returns.”

“I’ll do more than warn ye, lad,” Oarly bragged drunkenly. “I’ll have that sea snake on the fire when you get back.”

“Aye,” Phen laughed. “Fight the beast, if you want to, just be sure and warn me if it returns.”

Back near where the tunnel opened onto the main chamber, Phen dropped the contents of his sack out onto the floor. A small bundle of dried meat, a wheel of cheese, and a cord of dried wood spilled out of it. Oarly snatched up the rations while Phen used a flaming finger spell to start the dwarf a fire. Once he was done, he extinguished his magical light. Unlike the dwarves who had returned from the underground cities to aid in the recent battles, who could see as well in the dark as they could in the sun, Oarly had been among the dwarves who’d stayed on the surface and lived in Xwarda. Without the fire’s light, or Phen’s orb, he wouldn’t be able to see at all.

With the fire lit, Phen stood at the mouth of the tunnel, waiting for the serpent to leave.

“Here,” Oarly handed Phen a long dagger. “Take this, just in case.”

Phen looked at it. It reminded him of the dagger Hyden Hawk had given him before they went into the blue dragon’s lair. He took the weapon with a nod of thanks. If he hadn’t lost Hyden’s dagger on a zard ship, at least a thousand lives could have been saved. He could have run it through the Dragon Queen’s heart before she let loose all those demons into the world.

He made to slip this new knife into his belt, but realized that his clothes, and his belt, were as stony as he was. There were only two things on his person that he could remove: Loak’s ring, and the medallion that held Claret’s dragon tear, and even they looked made from marble.

A scraping sound drew his attention to the other tunnel.

“What is it that I’m supposed to do?” Oarly asked with a blank expression on his face.

Phen turned and looked at him severely. The dwarf grinned devilishly back at him.

Phen shook his head and went through the motions of sucking in a breath. A green phosphorescent glow was wavering at the mouth of the larger tunnel. Soon, the large viper-like head was hovering above the floor as the thing’s bulk slid out of the opening. The room was filled with the strange green-tinted glow. The head darted instantly toward the mouth of the smaller tunnel, where Phen stood. Only the fact that the opening was smaller than the thing’s skull kept it from snatching Phen up and swallowing him. Its milky, pupil-less eyes narrowed peevishly. A forked tongue shot out and flickered across Phen’s face. Oarly was holding his battle axe’s blade up over his face to keep his eyes from settling on the creature.

Phen felt the tingling of the dragon tear medallion around his neck. He could see it in the reflection of the serpent’s eyes, showering out a fountain of prismatic sparkles. The flickering tongue shot out at the dragon’s tear and tasted the air around it. For a long moment the serpent held its head there, as if it were deciding what to do about the intruders. Then it finally eased back. Phen glimpsed the rows of palm-sized suction cups that ran the length of its undulating body as the triangular head moved away. Only when the thing was over the pool did the serpent take its strange gaze off of Phen. When it did, it slithered right into the water and its glow eased quickly out of the cavern and through the now submerged opening. It had to be a hundred paces long from tip to tail. Phen let out the breath he’d been holding and slipped Loak’s ring onto his finger. Immediately, he faded from sight. He glanced at the dagger in his hand to make sure it had vanished too. It had.

        He turned to see Oarly still hunched behind his axe blade. As quietly as he could, Phen crept over to the dwarf’s side and let out a loud yell. He was rewarded with a new fetid stench. He almost gagged and vomited as he laughed his way across the entry chamber and down the other passage to the serpent’s lair. Behind him, Oarly was cursing and swearing, and trying to regain the wits that had been scared out of him.

***

As Phen walked cautiously down the long, winding tunnel, Oarly braved the water of the main chamber and washed out his britches and small clothes. He’d done the exact same thing last time they were here, only then there had been no fire to dry his things with. He wasted no time wringing the filth out of his garments and hurrying back to the safety of the smaller tunnel. He was glad he’d brought that last flask, for he was shivery and cold. After laying his clothes by the fire, he took a deep swig and sat back with his axe. The stone floor was so cold on his arse, though, that he jumped up. The fire was too small and he was getting cold. After another long pull from the flask, he began hopping and pacing around.

***

Phen was finding the major flaw in his plan as he neared the darkened serpent pit. He couldn’t see. If he cast his magical orb of light, it would hover over his invisible head and throw his shadow. He decided that, up until he snatched the jewel off of its pedestal, it didn’t really matter if he was seen. He was immediately thankful for the light. A few more steps would have carried him tumbling down into the shallow pool that ringed the unnaturally formed chamber. He took in the room and felt a deep sense of awe at the beauty of it. Wicked stalactites hung down from the ceiling, dripping water into the pool full of wiggling two- and three-foot miniature serpents. They were identical, save for size, to the one that had just left.

Phen had a theory on why these little serpents stayed so small and guarded the glittery egg-sized emerald, if in fact that was their purpose at all. The water in the moat probably wasn’t sea water, and there wasn’t any food. They only ate what the larger serpent brought back, so they couldn’t grow. He slipped down from the edge of the opening and felt his heavy feet go into the water. He couldn’t tell the temperature of the liquid due to of the condition of his nerve endings. He cupped a handful of it, though, and brought it to his mouth. Tentatively he touched his tongue to the water. It wasn’t salty, and he decided that he needed to investigate if he could still taste. As he waded across the waist-deep pool to the island of coins and jewels, he studied the metal statues. He didn’t notice, when he was there before, the wide, curving swords at their belts, nor the ruby eyes that seemed to follow him. He looked down and saw that the little serpents were furiously snapping and biting at him. If a normal man attempted this, Phen mused, he wouldn’t make it across before he was stripped to the bone. Some of them were attaching themselves with their suction cups. He would have to have Oarly burn them off. He was certain that if they escaped into the salty sea water they would grow to be as big as the other one, and he didn’t want to be responsible for loosing a bunch of serpents along the coast. There were enough stories already of such beasts attacking ships and wrestling them to the bottom of the sea.

Phen’s feet found the base of the mountain of wealth and he started to climb up it. By the time he was standing amid the skeleton guardians, at least a dozen of the little serpents were clinging to him. He took a few calming breaths and decided that the light didn’t matter anymore. If he could see the serpents clinging to his invisible skin, then so could anything else. He could burn them off with a flaming finger but he’d just pick up more of them on his way back across the moat.

So much for planning, he thought as he shook his head. He tried to force the jittery excitement and fear from his mind. He needed another way to keep the skeletons off of him after he grabbed the jewel. Phen’s confidence always seemed to override his better judgment, but even as he realized this he spoke his next spell, stopping at the last word so that he could loose its effect at the desired moment. Then, without another thought, he grabbed the emerald from the pedestal and gave the nearest skeleton a good shove toward the other two. He stepped back across the moat as quickly as he could. There was no doubt the skeletons were now going to come for him. The one he’d toppled had wriggled and tried to gain its balance on its way over.

The great weight of Phen’s body, and the growing number of serpents sucking onto him, was making his crossing slower than he’d hoped. He could hear the coins and jewels sliding into the water as the iron skeletons took up pursuit. Phen felt like he weighed a ton. He was nearly covered with the eel-like things. The added bulk threatened to drag him down, but he pushed himself onward. Finally, just as he felt the thumping tink of one of those curved sword blades across his hardened shoulders, he made it to the other side. He heaved himself up and back-kicked at the cherry-eyed thing. It went sliding back into the moat.

Phen pushed his way into the tunnel floor. Only two of the skeletons were crossing. The other was trying to get its footing on the loose mound of coins. Phen had hoped to have all three of them in the water, but this would have to do.

As the closest skeleton reached up to pull itself into the tunnel, Phen booted it back. He felt the dragon’s tear medallion at his neck tingle as its power flowed into his spell. He’d expected it, but the amount in which it magnified his casting was surprising. Slowly at first, the moat’s water stilled and clouded as the surface iced over. Within moments it was frozen solid. The eels were trapped in place and the two ice-locked skeletons were thrashing their arms and making silent faces as their eyes burned in anger. The other skeleton started across the ice. It kicked and took two steps, then fell hard as its metal feet lost all traction. Phen dropped to his belly and rolled back and forth across the cavern floor, crushing the dozens of flailing little eels that were stuck to him. Most of them let go, but not all. Without bothering with the last few, he tore off down the tunnel. Oarly and his axe were better suited to deal with the remaining skeleton. The sudden thought came to him that it was still several hours until the tide receded, and that the pool wouldn’t stay frozen that whole time. Phen was trying to think, but when he darted into the narrow passage all thoughts left his brain completely. He couldn’t fathom what he saw.

Oarly was standing naked from the waist down, tipping a flask back while swinging his free arm round and round for balance. After he gulped his sip, he started humming and dancing a jig.

Chapter 5

Borg was correct. The whole city of Dreen decided to celebrate the death of the demon that had stormed through. Since the head was far too large to post on a pike outside the castle, Borg jammed it down onto the castle’s highest flag pole. People all over the city came to see it, and the pure-blooded giant that killed it. During the private feast, which was held in one of the castle’s many stableyards, the number of spectators outside the castle walls began to grow. Borg, holding a full-size loaf of fresh baked bread that looked like a dinner roll in his hand, and a wide-necked floor vase full of ale in the other, announced that later he would recount the doing of the deed for them all.

Servants and castle staff spread the word, and by the time the feast was finished there were thousands of people gathered outside the castle. Luckily, General Escott and his troops were at hand to keep the gathering from getting disorderly. Many people were drunk, or trying to get that way, but most were just curious and happy to be hearing something besides the dire news of post-war horrors.

Mikahl made sure the great wolves were fed. Three does, freshly killed by the Royal Huntsmen, were laid out for them. Mikahl didn’t want to hear Borg’s story; he wanted to read the scroll from Hyden. He took a lantern and the rolled parchment out to where the wolves were. It had been several months since he’d been forced to leave his friend, who’d been deathly ill from hellborn scorpion venom. He’d left Hyden in the depths of the Dragon Queen’s dungeon and had thought him dead for a long time.

The oohs, awes, and gasps from the crowd as Borg strode up to the castle’s palisade and leaned his elbows on it drew his attention. The giant’s warm laugh rumbled through the cool evening air. Mikahl smiled, knowing that the citizens of Dreen were about to be entranced by a wonderful tale. Giants were the very best of storytellers. Mikahl wished the people from Westland could be present too, but most of all he wished King Jarrek’s people could hear.

Already the giant’s voice was building the tale. Never had so many people gathered in the streets been so eerily quiet. Only the panting of Oof and Urp at Mikahl’s side could be heard. He gave them each a pat on the neck then reached down and scratched Huffa behind the ears. Huffa shivered and made a circle. Her toothy maw opened wide into a tongue-curling yawn. The grazing pen they were in was well kept. Mikahl found a workbench under an old gnarled oak and sat down. The great wolves gathered around him, as if he were one of them. Even the wolves he didn’t know seemed to accept him as one of the pack.

Once he was comfortable, he broke the seal on the scroll and looked it over. The writing was neat but far from carefully scribed. It made Mikahl laugh. Hyden had grown up in the mountains, illiterate. He was the best archer in the realm, though, and a self-proclaimed master wizard.

Mikahl took a deep breath and began to read:

High King Mikahl Collum,

Mik, I am alive and well, recovering from the poisonous bite of that thing. I am with my people in the mountains, learning from the goddess and preparing for my destiny. I ask that you keep this quiet. A few others will have to be told, as this missive will explain. I know that I can trust you to carry out my requests directly, and efficiently. I will, as soon as I can, return to the kingdoms and grace you with my presence as payment.

Mikahl laughed at that. He knew Hyden wasn’t egotistical in the least. The man thought he was a jester, though. Mikahl couldn’t help but smile as he read on.

Firstly, the long bow Vaegon gave me is still in the dungeon at Lakeside Castle. Please have it retrieved and given into Phen’s care. As you know, it is priceless to me.

Secondly, Talon has found me and I understand the condition he and Phen share. Please inform Phen that I will accompany him into the Giant Mountains to seek the pool Claret told him of. Have Lord Gregory give him directions to my clan’s village, and ask Master Oarly to come as a personal favor to me. At your choosing, a small escort should be sent with them as there are still several stray demons about, not to mention the other hazards of the mountains. A few capable swords, and an archer or two should do. If Phen can bring the bow at that time, I would be grateful.

Thirdly, and most importantly, you must be made aware of some things. The thing that used to be my brother is still loose in the planes of hell. It has grown into an enormous power and has assumed the role of Abbadon, the Master Warlord of the hells. He will relentlessly try to find a way into our world. He saw you dispatch Shaella. I believe he will seek vengeance for the death of his love. You aren’t in any immediate danger, as there are no open gateways in existence that I know of. The goddess of my people has told me of a device that will allow you and me to banish the Abbadon to a deeper, darker place, where he won’t be able to travel the world of man any longer. This artifact lies beyond the Giant Mountains, and after Phen and Talon have been revived in the Leif Repline fountain, we will seek it out. Please choose the party well – no family men, as some of them will not return.

Xwarda must be guarded at all times. The foundation of the city is pure Wardstone, as you know. If the Abbadon, or any of his minions, managed to manipulate that substance, he could breach the barrier between the worlds permanently. This must never be allowed to happen. Queen Willa and General Spyra must be told of the threat as well. Proper defenses must be manned. It may be tomorrow or it may be a dozen years from now, but my brother, the Abbadon, will come. We must be prepared. Below is a list of scrolls and texts I need Phen and Master Oarly to bring to me.

Finally, I do not know what became of the staff Queen Shaella used to communicate with my brother. She held it in her right hand as you took off her head. You must find it and lock it away in a vault, or have Master Amill, or another qualified wizard, spell it powerless. If there is a force that will help the Abbadon find another gateway, or a flaw in the barrier that exists, the Spectral Orb atop that staff is it.

Now all of that is out of the way, I’m happy for you, and pleased that you somehow managed to save Princess Rosa. Tell the Lion Lord that Tylen sends his regards, as do my mother and father. Sadly, my grandfather passed away. Tell Lord Gregory that my Uncle Condlin has assumed the position of Eldest, and that you and your wife are forever welcome here. He asked me to tell you to make sure that the Summer’s Day Festival is crowded next year. My people depend on the trade there. Even you could’ve gotten your name on the Spire this year.

I must close this missive. Borg is growing impatient, and his stinking sack is offending the womenfolk. Once Phen arrives here, I’ll have him contact Dreen’s mage with a sending. Give my respects to Willa, Jarrek, and the dwarves.

Your friend,

Hyden

Mikahl just stared at the parchment for a long while.

General Spyra was now Lord Spyra. The man was trying to reorganize Westland with the help of Lady Able. Master Wizard Amill had been killed fighting alongside the dwarves at the Battle of O’Dakahn. Hyden Hawk must not have heard.

Borg was well into his second tale. He was now telling the story of how his people once killed a rogue dragon without the aid of magic. Mikahl could hear the giant’s booming voice carrying through the otherwise silent night. At his feet the great wolves had fallen asleep, save for Huffa, who kept a watchful eye over the rest. Through all the dire warnings and talk of magical artifacts, Mikahl’s mind kept coming back to the same strange fact. Neither Phen nor Master Oarly were at the feast earlier. As he thought about it more, he decided that he hadn’t seen either of them for a few days. He began to worry about them. He could only imagine what they were up to.

***

Oarly saw a glowing ball and three little serpents dangling as if they were trying to swim through the air to get at it. He stopped his advance and looked at the flask in his hand, then back at the scene. Phen’s voice startled him so badly that he dropped the container into the fire. When the flames flared from the alcohol he stepped back.

“Oarly,” Phen yelled in a panic. “Get your clothes on. No, forget it, get your axe. There’s a skeleton coming, and two more back at—”

Oarly’s eyes went wide and locked onto something behind what he now realized was the invisible Phen. The boy whirled around and Oarly saw a shiny sword come sinking down at Phen’s chest. It hit Phen with a clank and it appeared that the hardness of the boy’s condition startled the thing wielding it. Suddenly the skeleton went stumbling backward, the result of an invisible fist, Oarly assumed.

Oarly came charging out of the tunnel with a yelp and bounced off of Phen. The half-naked dwarf went careening off at an odd angle with his axe held high. His battle cry faded into a cry of dismay. It looked as if the axe were too heavy for him and he was having to run to stay under it. He righted himself as Phen pulled Loak’s ring off of his finger and became visible again.

***

Phen didn’t know whether to laugh or cringe at the sight of the hairy naked dwarf. The skeleton stepped heavily into a swing of its silvery blade. Oarly met the blow with his axe and cleaved the thing’s sword arm completely from its body. Phen felt the wave of relief wash over him. When the skeleton bent down to try to get the sword with its other hand, he strode up to it and kicked it with a heavy marble boot. The skeleton’s legs crumbled, and it half fell into the pool. For a long time it thrashed about menacingly, but it was obviously no longer a threat.

“Where are your clothes?” Phen asked.

Oarly looked down and realized that he was naked from the waist down. “Bah!” he growled and stalked off toward the narrow passage.

“There are two more of those skeletons back there,” Phen said. “We’d better hurry, before the ice I put them in melts.”

“Aye, lad,” Oarly said. “If ya hadn’t scared me shitless, I wouldn’t be needing to get my clothes back on now, would I?”

Phen took a step back. He didn’t think he’d ever seen Oarly so mad before. He had to fight to hold in his mirth.

“Look,” he said, holding up the egg-sized emerald for the dwarf to see.

Oarly looked at it, gave a nod, then continued his tirade. “We got buckets full of jewels left over from that blasted dragon’s lair. I got scars from getting that treasure. What good is one more jewel, lad? I just don’t understand.”

“This one is magic. You played like you were dying in that lair, Oarly. You made me cry when I thought you’d died.” Phen turned toward the larger tunnel. He could hear the skeletons’ loud, scraping approach. “If I made you shit yer britches a dozen times, we still wouldn’t be even.”

Oarly’s anger vanished. He even barked out a laugh. He knew he’d made the boy cry like a babe. He pulled his boots on and grabbed the flask he’d dropped. Most of it had indeed spilled onto the fire. He still drained the last few drops.

“All right, lad, let’s see what you’ve stirred up, then.”

Together they charged off into the larger cavern. One of the skeletons had pulled itself in two, and the torso was trying to drag itself along the floor by its arms. Seeing that, Oarly gave it a wide berth. Phen took a long stride and planted his heavy foot on its rib cage. The thing rattled and then grew still. Phen leaned down for a closer look at its jeweled eyes. The rubies looked like onyx pebbles now that the power in them had been extinguished.

“You don’t even need me, Marble Boy,” Oarly chuckled. “That blade that slashed across your body didn’t even scratch your robe.”

“Stop calling me Marble Boy,” Phen yelled. He hated that. He hated that he sounded like a little child in a play yard over it, too. “I won’t be Marble Boy for long, Oarly. You can wager on that.”

“Awww, lad, you just don’t know,” the dwarf replied, pointing down at the serpent-covered third skeleton lying still at the bottom of the moat. Somehow the little eel-like creatures had survived the freeze. They wiggled and squirmed through the melting slush as if nothing had happened. “You will be Marble Boy forever.” Oarly laughed heartily and clasped Phen around the waist in a brotherly hug. “As long as you live, you’re doomed to be remembered as the boy made of marble who rode the red dragon and saved us at the Battle of O’Dakahn. Only if you somehow manage to magic yourself into a king, or a god, can you shake such a nickname.”

Just then a loud splash erupted from behind them in the entry cavern. Both of them turned and started quickly back toward it. If it was the serpent then they were possibly trapped between it and all the little ones in the pool. As they ran, Phen gave the emerald to Oarly and fumbled for Loak’s ring. It was hard to get it back off of the medallion chain and onto his finger while holding the dagger. He almost dropped it. Finally he put the dagger between his teeth and slipped on the ring.

The opening of the big tunnel wasn’t blocked off yet, but they could see that the entry cavern was filled with the slithering green glow of the serpent.

“I’ll look,” Phen said.

“Extinguish your light, fool,” Oarly hissed. “It’ll see you, if it hasn’t already.”

“Oh.” Phen had forgotten about the light spell entirely.

Suddenly the place went dark save for the continuously moving glow that radiated off of the serpent. Phen eased down to the big cavern and looked. The serpent was in front of the smaller tunnel, intently flicking its tongue as far as it could reach. Phen felt the jewel on the medallion around his neck begin to tingle and knew instantly that the serpent would sense it.

“Out of the tunnel now, Oarly,” he yelled. “Stay against the wall. We can’t let it trap us inside.”

The great head of the serpent lunged at Phen’s fountaining jewel, its huge, toothy maw opening wide as it came. Phen realized then that being invisible before this sinuous monster did absolutely no good, but by the time the thought finished in his head, he was covered in a cloud of fresh fishy smell, and the serpent’s mouth was closing down over him.

“For Doooon!” he heard Oarly scream, but Phen was yanked off his feet and the world turned into a dark, spinning frenzy.

… Continued…

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(The Wardstone Trilogy, Book Three)
by M. R. Mathias
4.5 stars – 102 reviews!
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Simply amazing. In the gripping conclusion of the Wardstone Trilogy, Mathias delivers the rapid fire action he's known for, but also manages to weave in a bit of humor while he's at it as well.
The Wizard and the Warlord (The Wardstone Trilogy Book Three)
by M. R. Mathias
4.5 stars - 99 reviews
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The Wizard and the Warlord - The Wardstone Trilogy-Book III is the gripping conclusion to the epic fantasy trilogy that M. R. Mathias wrote in a Texas prison. This compelling volume brings the elves, dwarves, giants, and the dragons into the story again as our heroes, led by High King Mikahl and the great wizard Hyden Hawk, are forced to fight for the fate of the Kingdoms. This time, they do so against the terrible creature that Gerard Skyler has become, and the legions of demon-beasts that he commands.
One Reviewer Notes:
The conclusion of the Wardstone Trilogy-Book 3- The Wizard and the Warlord provides a dramatic and exciting finish. In MR Mathias style, new characters are introduced and action is fierce and fast paced while beloved characters from the previous two books act to fulfill their destinies. Humor and heartbreak are interwoven themes. We see both heroic actions and desperate actions. Unexpected alliances develop. Not every character survives and some are permanently wounded. The characters who remain experience some closure and new beginnings in the final chapter of the book. All are forever changed. I do recommend that people read Books 1 and 2 first, but Mathias does give enough information so one could enjoy this book as a stand alone adventure.
Dr. Sheri Kaye Hoff
About the Author
The jewel you see glowing in the ring in my old authors photo isn The jewel you see glowing in the ring in my old authors photo isn't really a jewel at all. It is the crystallized tear of a real dragon. In my novel "The Royal Dragoneers" you might find the moment where this wonderfully magical tear drop fell from a green dragons eye. It hardened on its way down to land in a mess of troll corpses that the dragon was laying on. My grandfather died before I was born, but the ring was given to me by my mother, after my grandmother recently died. My grandfather had apparently won it in a poker game near the Red River between Texas and Oklahoma sometime in the early 1900's. It has been a boon, the magic of the teardrop, for it brought you here to me didn't it? Now treat yourself to something fantastic and try out the free sample of one of my novels. I hope you enjoy the journey. It will be spectacular. Thanks M.R. Mathias
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The Wizard and the Warlord (The Wardstone Trilogy Book Three)

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Now, ★7★ FREEBIES – Just For Today!

Prices may change at any moment, so always check the price before you buy! This post is dated Friday, November 8, 2013, and the titles mentioned here may remain free only until midnight PST tonight.

Please note: References to prices on this website refer to prices on the main Amazon.com website for US customers. Prices will vary for readers located outside the US, and even for US customers, prices may change at any time. Always check the price on Amazon before making a purchase.

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Untamed Journey

by Eden Carson

3.9 stars – 43 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

“A daring young woman meets her match in this entertaining and sexy romance of the Old West…The romance is well plotted, with plenty of patient seduction to fan the growing flames, and Ruth’s nature as a survivor makes her an appealing heroine…Populated by likable and well-developed secondary characters, with suitably evil villains, this romance is a satisfying Old West adventure.”

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4.3 stars – 23 Reviews
Text-to-Speech: Enabled
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Nobody knew where it came from. Nobody knew why it came. Even so, for two-bit (and antisocial) reporter Andy Pointer, the appearance in his city of a man made of moving stone meant the scoop of a lifetime. He would soon learn that The Stone Man was much more–and much worse–than that.

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3.9 stars – 15 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of The Misadventures of the Laundry Hag: Swept Under the Rug
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:
Crime and grime are everywhere, at least in Maggie Phillips’ opinion. Deep in the throes of a New England winter, Maggie’s still adjusting to her new role as confidential informant for the Hudson Police Department. When a suspicious fax is sent to one of her new clients, Maggie is sure she’s unearthed a conspiracy. With no crime to investigate, however, the Hudson P.D. can do nothing—that is until a wealthy trophy wife disappears and the FBI is called in to the hunt.

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Christmas Guest

by Jennifer Fowler

5.0 stars – 3 Reviews
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It’s Christmas, and fate is forcing Scott Morgan to rethink his successful executive life. First, an encounter with a curly-headed foster child seems to have thrown his efficient, logical psyche out of balance. Then a phone call in the middle of the night drags him back to his grandparents’ farm, a place of old memories he has avoided for twelve years.

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4.0 stars – 103 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of The Choosing (Blood and Brotherhood Saga Book One)
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:
Seth is a young man torn by fear and indecision. His life no longer in his hands, he fears an uncertain future where the only certainty is a life of servitude to the kingdom. Fortunately for Seth, he is not alone. His brother Garret too attends the choosing ceremony where their fates will be decided. Together the twins make their way to the castle city of Valdadore for the choosing ceremony but along the way Seth notices a strange new trend in his life.

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30 Days

by K. Larsen

4.5 stars – 8 Reviews
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Abused by her husband. Dealing with the loss of her only sister. A suicide attempt that doesn’t end in death and a husband who wants her inheritance. Elle’s life is a catastrophe. But she has a list and thirty things she’s determined to accomplish. Love isn’t on that list but it comes crashing unexpectedly into her life.

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Anna (The Starseed Series)

by Meghan Riley

4.4 stars – 7 Reviews
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To the outside world, Anna appears to be an ordinary high school senior. But readers will quickly learn that she is anything but in Meghan Riley’s fantastical debut novel, Anna. This fast-paced tale full of supernatural experiences, romance, and half-answered truths expertly blends science fiction with young adult appeal. Anna has a lot of questions. Should she pursue her desire to leave home for college and live out her dream of becoming a physicist? Or should she stay home and help care for her family, which has struggled ever since her father died in Afghanistan?

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Kindle Nation Daily eBook of The Day: Today We Feature The Gripping Conclusion to The Epic 5-Star Fantasy Wardstone Trilogy That M. R. Mathias Wrote in a Texas prison: The Wizard and the Warlord

4.5 stars – 99 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

**The Wizard and the Warlord – The Wardstone Trilogy-Book III** is the gripping conclusion to the epic fantasy trilogy that M. R. Mathias wrote in a Texas prison. This compelling volume brings the elves, dwarves, giants, and the dragons into the story again as our heroes, led by High King Mikahl and the great wizard Hyden Hawk, are forced to fight for the fate of the Kingdoms. This time, they do so against the terrible creature that Gerard Skyler has become, and the legions of demon-beasts that he commands.

From M.R. Mathias,

This is the CONCLUSION to The Wardstone Trilogy. It has taken me several years and a lot of sleepless nights to complete this grand work. When I decided to become a writer I gave it my all, from the moment I put the inkpen to paper in prison, to the new epic I am halfway through writing now. I hope you like reading Wardstone as much as I enjoyed writing it and bringing it to fruition.

You may see some of these characters and locals again, but the story of Claret and mighty Ironspike comes to its magnificent end here.

Enjoy the journey, M.R.

5-Star Amazon Review

 

“Simply amazing. In the gripping conclusion of the Wardstone Trilogy, Mathias delivers the rapid fire action he’s known for, but also manages to weave in a bit of humor while he’s at it as well. The story moves across a number of different locations and even into other dimensions, and is packed full of fighting and magic. The level of detail included really brings this book to the top as well. I was sorry to see that last page finally turn, even if it was a fitting end to an amazing series.”
About The Author

 

 

M.R. Mathias rose from unknown to award-winning, best-selling author at a pace most authors can only dream about. He is a prolific writer of epic fantasy novels, novellas, and short stories. Despite his busy writing, publishing, and promotional schedule Mathias continues to aid his fellow indie authors by posting about their books at Twitter and Facebook etc.
He shared his considerable knowledge of self-promotion in publishing The First Ten Steps. The book has become an important indie guide for navigating the often murky waters of using social media sites to get your eBook in front of avid readers.
Mathias has taken cross promotion to a new level in his “Indie Kindy” giveaways where he gives away a FREE Kindle Touch and or Kindle Fire loaded with independently published books. These events create a great deal of interest for the authors involved and to independently published books as a whole.
It is a pleasure working with M.R. Mathias and watching his amazing run at the top of the Amazon best seller lists.
William R. Potter
Indie author
Founder of the Independent Author Network

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of The Wizard and the Warlord by M. R. Mathias:

★★★★★ 5-Star Free Thriller Excerpt Featuring M. R. Mathias’ Billy Badass

On Friday we announced that M. R. Mathias’ Billy Badass is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

Billy Badass

by M. R. Mathias

5.0 stars – 4 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Thirty-one years ago, Bill Buxly, aka Buxly the Butcher, went to trial for killing his family. He was found guilty, and sentenced to die for those crimes. Now, Janet Hale, a recently divorced nurse, has purchased the house unaware of the brutal murders that took place there so long ago.

Can Lucy-Fur protect her boy from an angry ghost who wants to possess him? Can Michael fight through the madness and terror to find out what really happened? With the help of his babysitter and her Ouija board, he is going to try.

This isn’t your average haunted house novel, this is a trip into the mind of a man who spent a few years in a solitary cell. Don’t think you know what is going to happen, for in this creepy, edge of your seat horror/thriller not everyone is who they seem… even the dead.

Download the sample and start reading now.

***Formerly released as The Butcher’s Boy, under the indie pen name Michael Robb Mathias, this title won the 2011 Readers Favorite Award for Horror Fiction. Out of respect for Patrick McCabe, and Thomas Perry, who have similarly titled books, we have changed the name and reverted to the author’s favorite pen name. The audio and paperback versions are still available under the old title “The Butcher’s Boy,” by Michael Robb Mathias here at Amazon.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Chapter 2

 

Summer 2011

 

“Is it big?” Michael asked his mom as he navigated the labyrinth of boxes that were stacked in the living room.

He was eleven years old, still wearing his pajamas, and unsure whether to be upset or excited about moving to a new house two hundred miles away.

“It’s huge, Michael,” his mom’s smile went a long way toward smoothing the edges of his worry.  “The yard is huge too.  Lucy will love it.”

“Is it like Dad and Sheila’s neighborhood, all packed in with other houses and stuff?” he asked as he slid up onto a stool at the bar.

Lucy, a healthy black Rottweiler with a spiked collar, sauntered out of the bedroom she shared with her boy.  She scoffed at the boxes then waggled over to Michael and nuzzled his offered hand.  Lucy and Michael had been inseparable even before the divorce, but now they were joined at the hip.

“No way Jose!” his mom slid a glass of the good stuff over to him as if they were in an old Western saloon.

After Michael took the first gulp of milk, he gave her an open palmed gesture that implored her to elaborate about the new house.  She put a bowl of cereal in front of him and her eyes sparkled with her smile.

“The yard is as big as four of the yards in Summerwood.”  Her happiness bubbled over and she did a skipping dance step on her way back to the fridge.

Michael giggled. It had been a while since she had felt anything resembling this sort of elation.  Michael could sense her joy and the feeling was contagious.

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Ms. Janet Hale, formerly Mrs. Janet Wilson, had just finished nursing school a month ago and already she’d found a great position at a modern hospital.  The house she’d just purchased was huge – the lot was over two and a half acres, and it was near the end of a block with open fields across the street.  It was almost like looking out at the country.  She couldn’t believe the deal she’d gotten on the place.  Sure, it was old, and the only neighbor was an elderly retired woman, but there was a tall wooden fence that ran the length of the property line on that side.  It was three hours away from home, but Janet thought that the change of pace might help Michael out of the slump he’d fallen into.

The divorce had been hard on both of them.  First there was the discovery that Jack was having an affair.  Try explaining that to a nine-year-old boy.  Then there were the long terrible months of arguing and crying before she finally mustered the courage to walk away.  That was followed swiftly by the lawyers, the telephone fights, and the mercifully brief battle for custody.  The only home Michael had ever known had been sold, and for the last year and a half, the two of them, and Lucy, had been living in the little uptown apartment.  It was time for them to move on, to put the bad times behind them and start a new life in a new place.  She only hoped that it wouldn’t be too much for Michael to handle.  He’d already been through enough.

The divorce had paid for her tuition and now all those long nights of studying were reaping dividends.  She wasn’t just a nurse’s aide anymore; now she was a Licensed Practical Nurse.  Even better, she was an LPN employed at a relatively new hospital in a cozy family town that boasted one of the best high school graduation rates in the country.  She hoped that Michael was ready, because the deal was done, the boxes were packed, and the movers were due at any moment.

“Is it as big as a football field?”  Michael asked.

“Imagine a football field with a house built in the middle of it,” she replied.  “The back of the backyard touches one street and the front of the front yard touches another.  The driveway is long and straight, and it runs right past the house to a garage apartment. There are huge oak trees in the backyard too, and a shed.”

Michael seemed excited now.  He picked up his bowl and drank the sweetened milk from it with a slurp that caused Lucy to turn an anxious circle on the kitchen linoleum.

“What’s a garage apartment?” he asked.

Janet took a can of dog food from the counter and put it in the opener.  Like most Rottweiler’s, Lucy’s tail had been bobbed.  Because she had no tail to wag, her whole rump waggled back and forth when she was excited.  She ate two cans of food a day and was eager for the first of them.

Over the grind of the can opener Janet answered Michael’s question.

“It’s an apartment built on top of a garage that isn’t connected to the house.  I was thinking that maybe we could fix it up and rent it to a college student or something.”

“Oh,” Michael had apparently lost interest in that aspect of the new place. “Can I build a tree house?”

Janet was saved from giving her dutiful: “We’ll see,” by the ring of the doorbell.

Lucy gave the door a look and a deep rumbling growl but didn’t leave the kitchen.

“It’s the movers,” said Janet.  “Here, put Lucy in the bathroom while I let them in.”  She pounded the thick glob of Alpo out of the can into the dog’s bowl and handed it to her son.  Lucy followed him as if he were carrying sirloin.

Only when the dog was secure in the bathroom did Janet dare answer the front door.  They hadn’t named her Lucy-Fur for nothing.  If Lucy felt that Michael was threatened in even the slightest way, the hackles on her back stood out and a growl as low as thunder rumbled forth.  Even as a puppy she’d been protective of her boy, but since the divorce and the long nights with Michael crying while clinging to her neck, the dog had become his guardian in every sense of the word.  Lucy hadn’t attacked anyone yet, but her menacing snarl had caused more than one pizza guy and many a stranger to turn and walk quickly away.  It was another of the issues that Janet hoped the new environment would change.

They helped the movers load and mark boxes all day then crammed into the U-Haul and hit the highway.  A few grueling hours later, under an orange-blue dusky sky, they pulled into the driveway of their new home.  Michael was asleep and the moving truck wouldn’t be there until morning.  Janet didn’t even have the key yet, but she wanted Michael to have a chance to see it before they went to the motel.

Lucy stirred beside her, and by the distress in her wiggling Janet could tell that she had to pee.  She gently woke her son and then stepped out into her very own, and very un-mowed yard.  Cutting the grass, she realized, was going to be a chore.

“Wow, it is huge!” Michael said as he nearly fell out of the truck.  Lucy was right on his heels. “Is the power on?  Are we going to have cable?  I have to have Internet you know, for school reports, and that kind of stuff.”  Michael and the excited dog made their way past the kitchen door toward the garage apartment at the rear of the house.

Standing at the end of the driveway and looking down it at the garage apartment put the rectangular two story house to the left, literally in the middle of the yard.  The house was sided with slatted wood and had shutters on windows that would eventually have to be replaced.  Janet figured that a few coats of paint would go far toward making it presentable.  Along the right side of the driveway there was a tall wooden fence, on the other side of which was another concrete drive just like hers. The old woman’s house was the last on the block; beyond it there was a field, and then the edge of a forest. Supposedly there were train tracks back in the woods somewhere.  The street ended in a misshapen, curb-less circle of asphalt.

Janet cocked her head and strained to listen.  Someone was playing a piano – Mary Had a Little Lamb in slow, single notes, as if a child were pushing the keys.  A glance at the neighbor’s house revealed that all the lights were off.  It was after 9:00 p.m.  The elderly woman had to be asleep, but the piano sounded too close to be coming from anywhere else.  There had been an old upright sitting in the front room of the house when she’d looked at it with Mr. Parker last week, but the sound couldn’t be coming from her place. Could it?

Looking back up the street for the source of the music she saw that her property was separated from the newer tract houses on the other blocks by rows of thick healthy pine trees.  She decided that the song was drifting from the neighborhood beyond them.  She also decided that a riding mower was in her near future.

She walked to the small covered patio, and as she stepped up onto the porch the piano music faded from her mind.  She wasn’t sure now that the sound hadn’t been coming from inside of her house.  It was almost as if her stepping up on the porch had startled the person from their playing.

She shivered away her sudden unease then looked out at the road and the field-like expanse of the empty lot across the street.  She noticed a drab, well-lit building for the first time. She figured it to be a postal sorting facility because there was a row of old boxy mail trucks parked behind a high chain-link fence. She was glad that it was on the next street over. She didn’t want to hear vehicles pulling in and out all of the time.

“Mom!” Michael’s frantic voice came from the darkness somewhere behind the house.  Lucy’s savage growl was unmistakable and had a seriously alarmed quality to it.  Janet was sprinting around the corner and down the drive before she knew it.

“Mom, there’s a man!” Michael sounded desperate now.  “No Lucy, wait!”

“Oh God!” a pitiful sounding male pleaded.

Janet ran past the little door that opened from the kitchen into the driveway and turned the corner into the back yard.

“Keef it off me boy!” a disheveled looking man demanded. He was huddled on the sagging covered deck that extended from the rear of the house. “I dint do nuffin to you.”

“Who are you?” Janet yelled.

The man threw his head her way and she saw that his eyes were bloodshot.  Had he been inside playing the piano?  He seemed as if he’d just been woken from a deep slumber.  It was dark, and he looked like a wino or a homeless man.  His clothes were tattered and his hair was a matted tangle.  He was definitely terrified of Lucy.  The dog was at the edge of the deck with her teeth bared and growling.  Janet’s cell phone was in her hand and she was about to dial 9-1-1 when the man answered her question.

“I been helfing Mr. Pfarker clean the flace up.”  The words were slurred and came out in a whimper.  Some of his front teeth were missing and spittle sprayed when he spoke.  “Make it stoff.  I dint do nuffin,” he pleaded.

Janet relaxed a bit.  Mr. Parker had sold her the house.  The man on the porch was obviously just some local drunk.

“Lucy!” she called out sharply.  Immediately the Rottweiler responded by relaxing her stance.  “Down Lucy, that’s it, that’s a good girl,” she continued soothingly, as Lucy stepped back and gave Michael an uncertain look.  “Get her Michael, before she hurts him.”

Michael eased up behind his dog and took her by the collar.

“I don’t know or care who you are,” Janet told the man.  “This isn’t Mr. Parker’s house anymore.  If I see you here again I’ll set Lucy on you. Now go.”

The man hesitated until Janet nodded for him to leave.  He ran into the darkened backyard and Michael had to fight to keep Lucy from bounding after him.  Janet almost stopped him to ask if he’d heard the piano, but she caught herself.

“Was he a bum?” Michael asked with wide excited eyes.  “He was watching me pee.”

Janet shivered with a mixture of pity and disgust while working to calm her thundering heart.

“I don’t know what he was.  Let’s go get an ice cream.  I think the motel has a pool. Mr. Parker will be here in the morning with the keys and we’ll make sure that man knows not to come back.”

“He’d better not come back or Lucy will tear him up,” said Michael.

As if to reinforce the truth of her boy’s statement, Lucy let out a single bark of confirmation. She then trotted back to the U-Haul waggling her behind as if nothing had happened.

 

Chapter 3

 

 

The next day the house didn’t look nearly as charming.  The bright unforgiving light of the sun revealed the lackluster state of the place.  The old white paint was peeling and would have to be well scraped before a new coat could be applied.  The roof would need replacing before winter too.  Window sills needed caulking and the wooden porch was rotting to the point where Janet feared the planks might break through.  All of that, and the idea that a new lawnmower would cost her nearly two grand, had her worried. Money was going to be tight for a while because she had put most of hers into buying the place. She tried hard not to let her concerns show though because Michael was having the time of his life.

Originally assigned to help her unload the smaller boxes from the U-Haul, Michael had quickly been re-delegated the task of staying out from under foot and inspecting the backyard fence for Lucy sized gaps.  Even on the thick chain that was connected to one of the trees, the big dog had Janet nervous.  Michael was only half heartedly doing his job.  He returned three times to tell her about something new he’d discovered out back.  None of it had anything to do with the fence.

The dirt-floored shed at the far end of the property had a small tree growing inside it, he told her.  The trunk had penetrated completely through the roof and this had kept Michael fascinated until he discovered the storm cellar.

“It’s like King Tut’s Tomb was on Discovery, only there’s no gold,” he said.  “There’s all kinds of neat old junk in the boxes down there. Look,” he proudly displayed a rusty old pocket knife he’d found. His face was streaked with dirt and his bob of blond hair was a mess. “There are spiders too.”

The latest report was that the toilet in the garage apartment worked just fine, but there was no toilet paper to be found.  Knowing that he was going to get a scrubbing and a thorough looking over for ticks and spider bites later that evening, Janet didn’t even bother to ask him what he’d used to wipe himself with.

Mr. Parker had left the key in the mail box for them, but the movers wouldn’t be there with the appliances and the furniture until tomorrow.  Janet didn’t mind.  There was a lot of cleaning up to do before the big stuff went in, and there were plenty of smaller boxes for her and Michael to unload.

“Michael,” she called out.  “Come on honey lets go get some lunch.”

Lucy came tearing around the side of the house and nearly tackled Janet with her playful aggression.  The dog seemed a little nervous and when Janet heard Michael calling back to her she immediately understood why.

Michael was up in a tree.  Way up in a tree.  He was so high that she could see him in the backyard over the top of the two story house.  She took in a deep breath and tried to remind herself that he was just an eleven-year-old boy and that boys climbed trees, but it didn’t seem to be working.

“I found part of an old tree house up here mom!” he hollered.

“Get down, Michael! Lucy is off of her chain, and if you fall you’ll break your neck!”  Janet found herself angrily storming down the driveway like her own mother used to. By the time she reached the backyard she had calmed herself somewhat.  Michael had gotten himself down to a reasonable height by then, but Lucy was still nervous about it.  She ran to the trunk of the tree, put her front paws on it, and barked up at her boy.

“I’m OK, mom. Jeesh,” Michael called down.  “Where are we going for lunch?”

“We can’t go in anywhere with you looking like that bum from last night, so I guess it’s Mickey Dee’s.”

Michael swung out of the tree like a monkey and fell into the happy bundle of fur that was waiting to greet him.  He gave his mom a sheepish grin, but she suspected it wasn’t for climbing the tree.  It was because Lucy had slipped her collar and that could have been a dangerous thing if the wrong person wandered up.

“What do you think about yellow paint for the house?” Janet asked him, letting him know that she wasn’t that angry.

“Yellow is a girl’s color, mom.” Michael made a face.  “Do I have to paint my room yellow?”

“Yellow is just for the outside, silly. Now let’s load ourselves up and find those golden arches.”

Later in the afternoon, after the last of the boxes had been unloaded and some semblance of order had been imposed on the house, Janet stood staring at the place where she was certain she had seen an old upright piano the first time Mr. Parker had shown her the house.  The paint on the wall was slightly dirtier in a rectangular shape and the carpet less worn, but that could have been caused by a number of things.

Shrugging it off, she let her thoughts return to her more immediate concerns and dialed the number of the moving company on her cell phone.  Not only were they bringing her appliances and her furniture, but they were delivering her car too.  It wasn’t much, just an old white Honda Civic four door, but it was far easier to maneuver than the behemoth U-Haul she had nearly destroyed the fast food drive-through with.  On the fourth ring a woman answered and confirmed the 10:00 a.m. delivery.

Feeling better about things, Janet dialed another number on a whim.  She felt foolish all of a sudden and was about to hang up when an elderly sounding man answered.

“Parker residence. This is Cecil Parker speaking.  How may I help you?”

“Mr. Parker, this is Janet over at the new house. Well the old house,” she chuckled.

“Oh, yes, Janet.  Is everything all right over there?”

She felt stupid calling him about an object she may, or may not, have seen, but curiosity was getting the better of her.

“Sort of, Mr. Parker. When you first showed me the house I thought I saw an old upright piano in the front room, and I was wondering if you had it removed?”

“No, no I don’t recall a piano ever being in the house.  Is there a problem?”

“No, not about the piano.”  She shook her head to clear the silliness from it.  “There was a man here last night.  He said you hired him to clean up.  He was passed out on the back porch and he frightened me and my son quite badly.”

“Oh, my,” Mr. Parker’s voice was tinged with embarrassment.  “I’m very sorry about that Ms. Hale.” He sounded sincere and continued slowly in a kind, grandfatherly tone. “That was Willie Tee. I hired him after you last looked at the house, but he shouldn’t still be hanging around.  Will you be staying there tonight?  Should I come by?”

“No, our furniture won’t arrive until tomorrow so we’ll be at the Shamrock Inn at least one more night.  Mr. Parker, why was he still here?”

“Before you start to worry your pretty head over it, let me explain,” said Mr. Parker. “The man, Willie Tee is what we call him, is… ah… how do I put it kindly?”  The old man sighed and then cut to the chase.  “Willie Tee is retarded Ms. Hale.  He’s a drunk and he has no family.  He usually sleeps down by the railroad T-junction in an abandoned train car.  I’ve paid him to help me a few times, more out of pity than need.”  Mr. Parker seemed ashamed that he had needed the help a retarded laborer. “I truly apologize.  I hope he didn’t scare you folks too badly.”

“Well my son’s dog almost ate him, but other than that we’re fine.”

“Good, I’ll take care of it, Ms. Hale, I promise.  I should have known he was sleeping there while the house was vacant.  They won’t let him drink over at the Hope House where he’s supposed to stay.  That’s why he hides out down by the train tracks.  Be sure to tell your boy not to go down there messing around by himself.  Transients come through there on them trains all the time.  The sheriff does a good job of keeping them away from town, but the track line is federal land and the county has no jurisdiction down there.”

“I think Michael’s dog scared him pretty badly,” Janet clenched her jaw at the idea that Mr. Parker hadn’t told her about the transients before she signed the papers on the house.  She couldn’t be mad at him about it though; she could only be mad at herself.

“Please tell that man that we don’t want him around here again.”

“I will, Ms. Hale, and I am truly sorry about all this.  I’ll stop by tomorrow and take the boy for a walk down that way so I can show him where it starts to get unsafe.  He should know for himself where the sheriff can’t go. I still have the garage keys here anyway so it won’t be an inconvenience.”

“OK, Mr. Parker, we’ll see you then.”

Michael wanted to sleep at the house and was about three minutes into a temper tantrum over it when Janet reminded him that there was a pool at the motel.  It took a few more minutes, but Michael dropped the attitude and herded Lucy out to the U-Haul.  A moment later, while Janet was locking the doors and wondering about the retarded vagrant and the missing piano, Michael started laying on the horn.

After she turned the key on the deadbolt of the kitchen door and started storming up the driveway to scold her insolent son, she heard a single angry chord resound from deep inside the house.  It was as if someone had just mashed their hand on the bass keys of a piano.  Her heart pounded and she started to go back, but then the horn beeped again and in the silence that followed she heard nothing but the crickets and the persistent call of some unfamiliar night bird in the trees out back.  Then a pair of frogs groaned out long and low and she decided that had to have been the odd harmony she’d just heard.

 

Chapter 4

 

True to his word, Mr. Parker showed up around 9:00 a.m. with two other men.  One of them was carrying a cardboard tray with steaming cups of coffee, the other donuts.  Mr. Parker introduced the man with the coffee first.

“This is Mr. Duncan.  He runs the Hope House where Willie Tee is supposed to reside.  And this is Oliver.”

Mr. Duncan was fortyish and tall, with dark hair and a solid build.  He was wearing jean shorts and a black ‘Got Milk?’ t-shirt.  His goatee and his collar length hair gave him a rebellious air.  He was definitely not the office type.  Janet could picture him with a tool belt on a construction site somewhere.  She smiled and took the cup he was offering her.

Oliver was also tall, but the only thing holding up his oversized jeans was a thick black dress belt.  His t-shirt was threadbare and gray with the old Dallas Cowboys blue star logo on the breast.  He was pale and very thin.  Janet figured that he might be a resident from the Hope House.

“Just call me Steve,” Mr. Duncan said.  His smile was pearly and drew Janet’s eyes.  “We’re awful sorry about Willie Tee.  We came to see if we could repair Mr. Parker’s reputation by helping you unload, but it seems we’re a little early.”

I bet I can find something for you to do, Mr. Steve Duncan, Janet told herself.

“Mr. Parker,” she said, “you don’t have to feel bad.”  Then she sipped her coffee and turned to Steve.  “The movers are supposed to be here at 10.  I have some bigger boxes that go upstairs and there’s a rolled Indian rug still in the U-Haul; but what I really need is for someone to walk the fence line and see if there are any places Michael’s Rottweiler can escape through.”

Seeing that Steve was now looking around whilst he’d been listening, Janet answered the question that had revealed itself in his expression.

“Michael is my eleven-year-old son.  I think he’s out back planning to build his tree house.”

“I can handle the fence, Steve,” Oliver said.  “Probably a lot better than I can handle the lifting.”

Steve produced a pad and pen from his back pocket.  He handed them to Oliver then started in like a supervisor.

“Make a note of any bad spots in the fence and what you think we’ll need to fix them.  We can get that chore done today.”

“That would be great, Oliver,” said Janet.  “Just let me get Michael to take you around and introduce you to Lucy.”  She went into the house leaving the front door open.

Michael came out and met the men, then brought Lucy around the house to introduce her to Oliver.  Oliver said that he’d once owned a Rottweiler and he took his time letting the nervous dog sniff his hand and take in his docile demeanor.  After that, Lucy let Oliver scratch her behind the ears and then the three of them went looking for gaps in the fence.

Steve got a personal tour of the house while Mr. Parker took his oversized key ring down the driveway and began looking, by process of elimination, for the one that fit the padlock on the garage door.   After the walk through, Janet finished her coffee and promptly began searching the boxes for the ones that went upstairs.  She moved the boxes that went in the downstairs rooms without any help.  She was fit, and though she didn’t have a lot of confidence, she knew that she was somewhat shapely.  The fact that Steve was stealing glances every now and again had her smiling brightly on the inside.

It took them until noon to get the boxes and the rug situated.  The movers still hadn’t arrived so Janet told Steve to go round everybody up for lunch and then used her cell phone to order some pizzas.

*** * ***

When Steve went out the back door and started calling for Oliver, the Rottweiler growled at him. To Steve’s shame he couldn’t remember what the boy’s or the dog’s names were.   It wasn’t his fault, he decided.  He had been staring, sometimes openly, at Janet.  She was definitely a looker.  If she kept up the body language, and the frequent smiles, he was going to ask her to dinner and a movie.  He would wait until the move was finished though. He didn’t want to make her feel uncomfortable, or think that he was continuing his help in exchange for a date.

“Woof!” the dog thundered in mid air before she slammed into Steve’s chest erasing his thoughts and nearly knocking him over.  Only his quick reflexes saved his forearm from her bared teeth.

“Lucy! Here! Now!” the boy – Michael – commanded as he came running up on them.  Lucy’s ears laid back and she went directly to Michael’s side, but her eyes stayed glued to Steve.

“I didn’t do anything,” Steve stammered through his shakiness.  Seeing how calm, and in control Michael was unnerved him even further.

“She doesn’t know who you are,” Michael told him.  “If I wasn’t here to stop her you’d be in real trouble.”

As if to punctuate the statement, Lucy pealed out a series of angry barks that brought Janet to the back door.

Steve saw the boy glance at his mother who was frowning above her crossed arms. Michael slapped his thigh and dropped to one knee to sooth his dog.

“Good girl, Luce,” he said.  “That’s a good girl.”

Oliver came sauntering up to the scene.

“You see a ghost?” he asked Steve with an amused grin on his thin face.

“That’s not funny, Ollie,” Steve snapped.  “That dog just scared the shi… I mean scared the crap out of me.”

Janet stepped out of the back door.

“A big muscle-bound guy like you afraid of a little dog?” she said.

Steve felt his face flush with embarrassment.

“There’s nothing little about that dog,” he said a little more sharply than he intended as he pushed his way past Janet and went back into the house.

“Lucy stays out back while we eat,” Janet told Michael.

“What about me?” Oliver joked.

“You can come inside, Ollie.”  Janet chuckled.  “You look like you could use a few slices of pizza.  Now come on in and wash up guys.”

“Sorry, Luce, I’ll bring you a piece,” Michael said as he went in behind Oliver and his mother.  Lucy snorted her contempt at being left out, but she lay down at the foot of the door, with her ears raised.

The pizza arrived at the exact same time as the movers.  While the first loads of furniture were carried in by the two moving company employees, Michael, Oliver, Steve and Mr. Parker enjoyed slices of pepperoni while Janet ordered the poor men around.  They would never forget being two and a half hours late to her house.

After a quarter hour of Janet’s wrath, both Steve and Oliver felt sorry for the movers and began helping them.  Mr. Parker still hadn’t found the keys to the garage and left for his home office to try and find them there.  He promised to return shortly and left Michael with the remainder of the pizza.  Michael promptly grabbed Lucy a slice and went out the back door. Lucy was nowhere to be found.

He called for her several times and, after getting no response, he set the limp slice of pizza on the porch and went to the single place in the fence that he and Oliver had found where Lucy could escape.  It was behind the garage in an area overgrown with vines, but Michael braved the foliage and crawled under the rotted boards into the neighbor’s property.

He emerged into a tangle ten times as thick as his own yard.  Standing waist deep in shrubs, he found himself in near darkness.  He could barely see the neighbor’s house due to the untended jungle.

“Lucy, come on girl,” he called out.  “Come on, Luce!”

With each step he took his confidence faltered a little bit more.  It always did when Lucy wasn’t close at hand.  At school, restaurants, the mall, or other places dogs weren’t allowed to go, he always had an inner terror threatening to overwhelm him.  He didn’t even want to think about how bad it would be at a new school.  When Lucy was close though, he had no worries – she was his protector.  She would attack or stop at his command and that gave Michael a certain power over the world.  She would gladly give her life for him, and he for her, which was the only reason he was braving the creepy yard to look for her.

For over a year, during the divorce, he had wrapped his arms around her neck every single night and cried himself to sleep.  Lucy sensed Michael’s pain and she rarely left his side.  She didn’t like being separated from him any more than he liked being away from her, which was why this situation had Michael screaming on the inside.  Luckily, as he came out of the dense overgrowth into a small mowed area, he heard Lucy noisily trampling through the shrubbery toward him.

Lucy danced an excited circle around Michael, telling him that she was glad to see him too.  Then she darted away toward the neighbor’s house where an ancient looking woman was emerging from the crooked back door carrying a broom.  Such was the hunch in her back that Michael thought she might be a witch.

“Thomas?” the woman called out hoarsely.  “Tommy, is that you?”  She used her hand to visor the afternoon sun from her eyes as she looked out across the yard.  Her gaze fixed on Michael and his heart froze in his chest.  “Come on out of them trees, Tommy.  You’ll have ticks and poison ivy and Lord knows what else.”

Michael didn’t know what to do.  Who the hell was Tommy?  Lucy returned and pranced around at his feet.  She seemed as uneasy as he was.  The fact that she wasn’t growling or barking only served to alarm Michael further.

Using the broom as a walking stick, the old woman hobbled to the end of the porch.

“Who’s there?” she asked.  “Tommy?  Is that you?  Billy?  Billy, where is Thomas?  What have you done with him?”  Her voice had taken on an angry tone.

Michael put his hand on Lucy’s collar to still her.  He didn’t think the old crone had actually seen him yet.  She looked to be growing very agitated.  She finally turned and started back into her house, but right when she crossed the threshold of the back door she stopped and started sobbing.

“Oh God, no.”  Her voice was a sorrowful whine.  “Oh, Tommy, no.”  She hiccupped then stumbled forward and disappeared into the darkness of the house.

Michael didn’t hear anymore from her.  He bolted back through the brush toward the hole in the fence.  Holy crap, he thought.  That lady is nuts!

He looked down to see if Lucy was close, and he was relieved to see that she was right there beside him.  She moved ahead and led him to the hole, then quickly disappeared through it.   Michael dived like he was sliding into second base and pulled himself through right behind her.  He didn’t even care that he sliced himself open on an exposed nail.

As soon as he caught his breath Michael went to find Oliver.  He wanted the hole boarded over so that he never had to go back there again.

His mom headed him off in the house before he could talk to Oliver though, and her concern over his cut and his filthy state landed him in the bathtub.  He spent the afternoon being pampered and tended by Doctor Mom and her tackle box full of first aid supplies, while Steve, Oliver, and the movers finished their business.

Michael fell asleep downstairs and only roused briefly when Steve carried him up to his new room.  Lucy looked uncomfortable with that, but Mom scowled to keep her in check.

Michael dreamed that he was in the old lady’s yard again, only this time she raised her broom stick up high like and lurched off the porch toward his hiding place.  When he turned to run he tripped and fell over a tangle of roots.  No matter how hard he tried he couldn’t get back to his feet, and when the crone was upon him her face twisted into a ghoulish snarl.  Her maw gaped wide exposing rows of sharp pointed teeth.  The broomstick transformed into an axe, the heavy blade slicing through the air right at his face.  Michael woke with a start just before the axe cleaved his skull.

He was freezing.  The room was icy, so cold that he could see his breath when he exhaled.  This alarmed him and he sat up in bed looking around at his unfamiliar surroundings.  His first instinct was to feel for Lucy.  She was there nestled against his hip and sleeping soundly.  Then Michael looked down at the foot of his bed where a figure stood eyeing him curiously.

It was a boy of about the same age and stature as Michael, but this was no ordinary child; it was a wavering ghost of a boy.  Michael would have screamed but his throat was too dry.

There was nothing threatening about the ghost’s gaze, but Michael was no less terrified because of it. The apparition reached a hand toward him and Michael scooted back, waking Lucy.  The ghost looked as if it were about to speak, but the dog snarled and snapped at it.

“Billy…” the ghost’s eerie voice sounded just before Lucy shot through its smoky form and sent it swirling away into nothingness.

Angry and confused, Lucy recovered from her crash landing and went into a frenzy of barking and sniffing.

Michael realized it wasn’t cold anymore.  In fact it was sweltering.  He was struggling to breathe and couldn’t peel his eyes away from the spot where the ghost boy had just been standing.

Mom burst into the room, her eyes taking in everything.

“What is it?” she asked.  “What happened?  Are you two all right?”

Lucy yipped in response as Mom came to Michael’s side and pressed her palm against his forehead.

“Oh baby, you’re burning up,” she cooed. “You must have had a fever dream.  Will you be all right while I go find some Tylenol?”

Michael nodded, but he wasn’t sure if he would ever be all right again.  He knew he hadn’t been dreaming, and so did Lucy.

Continued….

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Billy Badass

by M. R. Mathias

5.0 stars – 4 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Thirty-one years ago, Bill Buxly, aka Buxly the Butcher, went to trial for killing his family. He was found guilty, and sentenced to die for those crimes. Now, Janet Hale, a recently divorced nurse, has purchased the house unaware of the brutal murders that took place there so long ago.

Can Lucy-Fur protect her boy from an angry ghost who wants to possess him? Can Michael fight through the madness and terror to find out what really happened? With the help of his babysitter and her Ouija board, he is going to try.

This isn’t your average haunted house novel, this is a trip into the mind of a man who spent a few years in a solitary cell. Don’t think you know what is going to happen, for in this creepy, edge of your seat horror/thriller not everyone is who they seem… even the dead.

Download the sample and start reading now.

***Formerly released as The Butcher’s Boy, under the indie pen name Michael Robb Mathias, this title won the 2011 Readers Favorite Award for Horror Fiction. Out of respect for Patrick McCabe, and Thomas Perry, who have similarly titled books, we have changed the name and reverted to the author’s favorite pen name. The audio and paperback versions are still available under the old title “The Butcher’s Boy,” by Michael Robb Mathias here at Amazon.

Reviews

“The author pulls no punches in excellent scenes so descriptive you can almost feel the victims’ terror and pain. Not that it’s a blood bath, there is terrible violence but also horror built as much on suspense as on the portrayal of brutality.” – The Book Keeper

“This book is not your typical horror story. The author’s work can be compared to Stephen King and Dean Koontz. Like their books, this plot takes you to unexpected places. There are twists and turns that keep the reader guessing: ghosts slipping in and out of bodies both living and dead, shadows and bumps in the night are the least of the main characters’ worries in this book. Fans of horror will not want to miss this creepy story.” — Readers Favorite International Book Award

“Keeps you on the edge of your seat. Possession, murder, kidnapping, and redemption…well thought out plot that builds to a crescendo. I highly recommend this.” Full Review: books-treasureortrash.com –Books-Treasure or Trash

“The novel is a suspenseful page-turner with well-developed characters. Even Lucy the Rottweiler is a round character. The specters, too, have solid personalities… renders them even scarier.” 4 of 5 stars. –ForeWord Magazine

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It’s a wild ride of demonic love, valiant battles, and foolhardy heroics in the exciting second installment of the epic fantasy, The Wardstone Trilogy, as M. R. Mathias’ terrific storytelling continues to capture readers’ imaginations with his fantastic world-building and
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4.6 stars – 114 Reviews
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Here’s the set-up:

Join Hyden Hawk Skyler, and some great new friends, on an adventurous quest, over land and sea, to find the Silver Skull of Zorellin.

Fight with Mikahl, Ironspike, and fierce King Jarrek as they try to free the enslaved people of Wildermont from King Ra’Gren and his Dakaneese Overlords.

Patrol the skies with Shaella, and her new black dragon, Vrot. With her father’s spell books, and the Priests of Kraw, she decides to aid King Ra’Gren, while scheming to free her lover, Gerard, from the hellish Nethers.

Demonic love, valiant battles, and foolhardy heroics await readers in this 175k word (600+ page) continuation of the epic ‘Wardstone Trilogy’ that was written in a Texas prison cell, by author, M. R. Mathias.

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“…Once again we are thrown into extreme action and adventure alongside the favorite characters of Hyden Hawk and Mikahl. A lot of new characters are introduced in this novel but M.R. Mathias has an awesome way of getting you to connect with them and see things through their eyes. While reading this book I was literally on the edge of my seat.”

Battle Scenes, Brawls, Mysteries, and Adventures
“…Mathias does a terrific job of enriching and expanding on his Wardstone Trilogy fantasy adventure with fresh and unpredictable schemes. There are many stories within the story….Yet it was the close relationships between the main characters that makes this book transcend beyond adventure.”

an excerpt from

Kings, Queens, Heroes
& Fools

by M.R. Mathias

Chapter Nine

They were given the Royal Compartments on the Seawander. There were two sleeping rooms, each five paces long and three wide. They had side by side cushioned bunks shelving out from the walls. A net faced storage ledge ran high on the wall, and a small writing table filled the space at the foot of the beds.  There was a brass oil lantern dangling from a short chain overhead, and as it swayed, the stark shadows it threw exaggerated the movements of the ship tenfold.

The two rooms were joined in the middle by a third, which was paneled with polished mahogany and had a round window that the crew kept clean enough to actually see through. The viewing portal, as it was called, was situated at the end of a booth table that could easily seat six men. There was a cushioned divan and an enclosed privy at the other end of the room. All three cabins were carpeted in plush sea-blue shag and trimmed with elegant brass works. As far as quarters on a ship went, this was the lap of luxury, but since none of the four companions had ever been to sea before, they thought it was cramped at best.

Oarly went straight to a bunk in the room he and Brady were to share and wasted no time getting rolled up in a woolen blanket. The dwarf asked that his meals be brought to him and that he not be disturbed. He then pulled the covers up over his head and lay stock still. All this he did to the amusement of the others a full hour before the ship was scheduled to depart the docks.

The other three only stayed below long enough to drop off their things. They were too excited to miss watching the land fade away as they took to the ocean. While they stood at the rail, Hyden had Brady and Phen go over the checklist of supplies for the tenth time. Rope, blankets, grappling hooks, lanterns, oil, arrows by the score. There were also shovels, axes, picks and other digging tools, not to mention the tents, field rations, foul weather gear and other necessities like soil cloth and healing herbs. They had thought of everything, or so they hoped.  It was a good thing, too, because by the time they had finished discussing the supplies Captain Trant was bellowing, “All hands aboard!” The ship was departing Old Port for the open sea.

At dinner the night before the Captain had told them a little about the Seawander. At just over two hundred feet long she was no ordinary ship. Built to carry Queen Willa and other nobility, instead of a cargo, it was sleek and ballasted for optimal speed. She boasted three masts that reached high into the sky and the Captain promised that they could fly enough canvas to outrun any Dakaneese pirate ship they came across. What’s more, the transom was lined with Wardstone, just like a river-tug, and the water-mage on board could make the ship go as fast as a double-decked rower, and that was against the wind. As proof of this, the ship lurched away from the dock without a single sail set and carved a sharp wake as it picked up speed and made its way through the harbor.

Men in fishing boats waved their hats and cheered the Seawander as she passed. A moment later, as she slid through the shadow of a monstrous ship, the crew of the galley called down to them in languages that neither Hyden nor Phen could name. Members of the Seawander’s crew called back up to them in clipped but joyous shouts. The hulking cargo vessel towered over them in the water so much so that Hyden and Phen both had to crane their necks to take it all in.

Talon swooped and terrorized the flocks of noisy white gulls that were following along behind them. He rolled and spun and showed off his aerial prowess to the smaller sea birds as if he were their superior. The gulls seemed more impressed with the bits of food that were being stirred up in the ship’s wake, but still kept a wary eye on him.

Deck Master Biggs called out orders, his voice booming through his thick seaman’s beard. The first mate repeated them, and like monkeys, men took to the rigging and unfurled the yellowed canvas of a dozen or more sails. Soon the Seawander began picking up speed. As she left the protected area of the port she began rising and falling with the swells. Each time she came down a great splash of spray and foam shot out from under her and blew back across the deck. Phen gripped the rail tightly with one hand and thrust his other fist up into the air urging the ship on. Brady found the bowsprit figurehead, a mermaid of polished ironwood, and leaned out ahead of the ship with her, letting the wind blow his long brown hair back behind him.

“Look!” Phen exclaimed.

Hyden searched the sea where Phen was pointing but didn’t see a thing. Then all of a sudden a delfin fish, as big as a man, sleek and green leapt out of the water alongside of them; another one shot out of the sea, then another. Soon a dozen of the smiling, snouted fish were arcing through the air racing and dancing with the ship as they went.

Talon swooped down amongst them, and through his familiar link Hyden could hear their joyous laughter and mirth. They were like a group of children playing in the summer sun.

Phen streaked across the deck toward the bow to tell Brady about the delfin. Deck Master Biggs caught him up about half way, flipped him around then half dangled him over the side rail. With a threatening, yet playful, look on his face, the Deck Master snarled, “There be no running on me deck, boy! No more warnings!”

When Deck Master Biggs pulled him back onto the ship and let him go, Phen’s eyes were the size of chicken eggs, but his terrified grin was even wider than before.

The delfin followed them for some while, and before they knew it, land was no longer in sight. The Captain said something to the Deck Master who looked behind them through his long glass then pointed. Biggs said something to the first mate, who came over to where Brady, Hyden and Phen were now leaning on the rail enjoying the delfin show and Talon’s antics.

“Keep a watchin’ as you are,” the man said with a discolored, gap-toothed grin.

Hyden let his eyes trail behind them to where the Deck Master was pointing his looking glass. For a moment he saw a surging swell on the water behind, then it was gone. It came again, only closer this time. There was a single sharp spiked fin as big as a man’s leg breaking the water at the peak of the swell. Then it was gone again, back into the rolling sea. Then all of a sudden a fish the size of the Seawander herself leapt clear of the surface beside them. Its toothy mouth snapped shut on a pair of delfin as the terrified screeches of the rest of the pod caused Hyden to cringe and Talon to veer sharply away.

“Wow! It’s a sabersnout, Hyden,” Phen exclaimed loudly.

“Just so, lad!” Captain Trant boomed from somewhere. “Don’t fall over the rail now.”

Talon was so startled by the monstrous fish that he came swooping down out of the air onto the deck and landed badly among a roped down stack of water barrels.

The delfin were long gone when the sabersnout leapt through the air a second time. Its glossed black, dinner plate sized eye looked directly at Hyden Hawk. The satisfaction it felt after having just eaten a fresh meal was no less than the joy the delfin had been feeling when they were at play. If it could have, it would have eaten Hyden as it had the two unlucky delfin. Thus is nature, Hyden told himself as the big fish splashed gracefully into the rolling ocean and disappeared.

The Captain’s table was in the galley, and that evening they were invited to eat with the officers of the ship. The fare was quite a bit better than the promised sea biscuits and salted meat. It was actually fresh venison and honey pork with hard bread and seaweed casserole. The table was treated to hilarious entertainment courtesy of Babel, the Captain’s little blue-haired mango monkey. The monkey was the size of a newborn child and, as the first mate played a ditty on the flute, it whirled, tumbled, and spun across the table as gracefully as the ballerinas that sometimes danced in Queen Willa’s auditorium.

They tried to get Oarly out of bed to attend the dinner, but not even the lure of wine or stout ale would get the dwarf to leave his cabin.

After dinner, back in the Royal Compartment, Brady listened while Phen and Hyden took turns reading out of the Index of Sea Creatures. They spent a little time reading about delfin and the sabersnout, but curious as they were, they read on. They read about the cloud fish that squirted inky poisonous fluids into the water to stun its prey. They read about the ever hungry marsh threshers and the rare flying sea turtles whose bright turquoise shells were worth a small fortune in gold. They read into the evening until eventually all three of them were plagued with yawns. Finally, long after the moon had presented itself, they all fell asleep to the smooth rocking motion of the ship as it carved its way westward through the ocean.

Phen found himself at the ship’s rail before the sun was even up. He was heaving his supper to the fishes. Brady was right beside him.  Oarly was sick as well, but had locked himself in the privy down in the Royal Compartments. Sick or not, the dwarf was determined to stay below deck the entire journey.

“It’s not right,” Phen whined. “I wasn’t sick yesterday.”

“Neither was I,” Brady said glumly, just before lurching another load of bile out into the sea.

“I don’t know where it’s all coming from,” rasped Brady when he was done. “I know I haven’t eaten that much.”

“Aye,” Phen agreed then started to heave.

“Here,” the first mate said, stepping out of the darkness. “Drink ye a few swigs of this, lads, and your guts’ll settle.”

Brady took the offered flask and was about to sip from it when the man cut in again sharply.

“Ah! Ah! Ah! Wipe you fargin mouth first,” the man all but shouted. “Do ya think I wanna taste your innards?” Even in the darkness, the gaps in his teeth were visible.

“Sorry,” Brady mumbled. He wiped his mouth with his sleeve then took a long pull from the flask. The burn of the liquor was harsh, especially in his throat. When it got down into his belly, though, the roiling there dispersed into a warm fuzzy pool. Phen took two quick swallows and nearly choked.

The next day, save for the crew, Hyden had the deck to himself. Oarly, Phen, and Brady were all below. Phen and Brady were sleeping soundly. Oarly was still locked in the privy, but snoring loudly between his less frequent rounds of dry heaving.

After conferring with Deck Master Biggs, Hyden scaled up the main mast’s maze of rope ladders, yardarms, and rigging, up to the crow’s nest at its top. From there he could see the horizon in all directions. There was no land in sight. It was a little unsettling, but not so much as when he looked down to see that the little ship below him wasn’t actually below him at all. It was off to the right at the moment, riding up the face of a swell. Ever so slowly it passed under him and he felt the crow’s nest swaying quickly out to the right of the ship as it eased down the other side of the wave. Not since he first started climbing the secret hawkling nesting cliffs to harvest their eggs with his clansmen had he felt such a tingling rush of vertigo.

No, that wasn’t true. When he’d ridden on the dragon’s back, he’d felt the same thrill, but that ride had been mostly at night. The feeling of desperation he felt during that flight had overshadowed everything. This was different. He decided he would have better odds calling the outcome of a coin flip than he would of landing on the deck if he fell. He knew he wouldn’t fall, though. He had been climbing all his life.

For a long while he spread his arms out like they were wings and focused his sight out ahead of their course. Only puffy white clouds, blue sky, and the slow rolling turquoise sea were in his field of vision. He imagined first that he was once again on the back of the dragon, but then that wasn’t enough. He imagined that he was the dragon, that he was gliding effortlessly over the sea, his big hind claws skimming the tops of the waves, and his wide leathery wings pushing volumes of cool salty air. In his mind he flicked his long sinuous tale this way and that to keep his balance true, then arced a swift banking turn one way, then the other.

Talon swooped in and landed at the basket’s edge. The bird had to keep his wings out to maintain his balance there but he did it gracefully.

Hyden smiled at his familiar as the dragon vision slipped away from him. He touched the dragon tear medallion that always hung under his shirt. If you ever have a need of me, just call me through the tear, and I will come, Claret had said to him. She’d also said: Remember who your true friends are. They come few and far between. He wondered if her remaining egg had hatched yet. It galled him that Shaella had tricked his brother into stealing the other two. Gerard had paid the price for his thievery—or was still paying it.  Hyden shook off the thought and tried to get his mind back on pleasant things, but it wasn’t to be.

He didn’t quite understand what Shaella meant that night, in the middle of nowhere, just before he threw her off the dragon’s back. “You wouldn’t know what’s left of him,” she said. “He’s barely even human now.”

Claret had confirmed that Shaella’s words were true. The Westland wizard Pael had run a dagger through Gerard’s heart, but Gerard hadn’t died. The magic ring he’d found had kept him alive, but barely. Apparently he had crawled down into the darkness of the Nethers to escape Pael, or maybe to chase the power that the old crone had once foretold he would find down there.

Shaella said that he was barely human now, and Claret said that Gerard shouldn’t have survived, but he had, because of the ring—the ring that Hyden was supposed to be wearing.

The goddess of Hyden’s clan had told him that he must someday get the ring back from Gerard, that it was supposed to have been his. Until it was on Hyden’s finger, the balance of things would remain badly off kilter.

Hyden hoped beyond hope that the Silver Skull of Zorellin might actually allow him to retrieve it, or at least allow him to go into the Nethers after it. He hoped that Gerard was still human enough to remember who he was.

Hopefully the bond they shared as brothers would be enough to allow Hyden to take back the ring peacefully and set the world aright.

Talon shrieked, bringing Hyden back into the reality of the moment. To the south, the sky was turning gray. Hyden took the looking tube from its holder in the basket and looked out at a dark place on the horizon. He decided that he could probably see better through Talon’s keen vision. With his own eyes still open, he sought out Talon’s sight. Now he could see a mass of churning black clouds as if they were right in front of him. Bright jagged lightning streaked up from the sea and fat drops of rain pelted the angry waves. The swells had grown huge and the wind was blowing in gusty spurts. It wasn’t easy remaining calm as he climbed back down the mainmast to find Captain Trant.

“A bad storm you say?” Captain Trant scanned the sky to the south and sniffed the air. “Maybe so, maybe so. Biggs! Go get me the long glass!” the Captain ordered as he strode up onto the forecastle. A brass tube as long as a man’s arm was brought up and the Captain peered through it to the south. He was silent for a long time, then he turned to look at Hyden curiously. “You saw that from the nest, did you?”

Hyden nodded. Talon flapped at his shoulder as the wind gusted and threatened to topple the bird. Captain Trant’s eyes stopped on Talon for a moment.

“I’d suggest that you ’n’ yer bird both get below afore long, and take this.” The Captain deftly snatched the second mate’s flask out of his shirt pocket as he moved by. “Your men will need it. That’s not just a rain storm blowing at us, Sir Hyden Hawk, that’s something a few tads nastier than hell!”

Chapter Ten

High King Mikahl saw the demon-boar just in the nick of time.

Earlier in the evening they had taken two nice does, and we’re now trying for a third. Four of the archers had ridden north making a wide berth around the river. They were riding back toward Mikahl and the other three men. They were coming slowly, trying to flush a buck, or maybe even a wild sow, out into the open. Mikahl didn’t find much sport in hunting this way, but when there was an army of men to feed, and the sun was setting, there was no better way to drum up a meal. The High King was positioned closest to the band of thick underbrush that ran along the river’s bank. He was reminiscing about the last time he’d been on a true hunt.

His fond memory was interrupted by two dull red embers a good foot apart, glowing in the deepest shadows of the forest ahead of him. He squinted, blinked a few times. Then, just as he realized that the embers were actually eyes, the beast charged.

Mikahl loosed the arrow he had nocked, then flung the bow at the enormous beast and drew his sword. Whether from the sudden appearance of Ironspike’s magical blue glow, or from fear of the huge charging demon-boar that it illuminated, Mikahl’s horse reared and whinnied loudly. In Mikahl’s head, the eldritch symphony of Ironspike’s power blasted full force, into a glorious and triumphant harmony. Mikahl turned the horse with a yank on the reins and was ready to slash when one of the fool archer captains tried to be a hero and charged his horse right between Mikahl and the demon-boar. The boar’s tusks were razor-sharp and at least the size of a young girl’s forearm. The archery captain’s poor mount didn’t have a chance. The boar dug his head down and gored up through the animal. Then it reared back and sent horse and rider twisting into the trees.

Mikahl was awed by the size and strength of the creature. It was as tall as a man at the shoulder and was as big as a horse-drawn wagon, but low to the ground and covered in bristling hide.

The archery captain’s sharp scream was abruptly cut off as his head slammed into a trunk. The disemboweled horse crashed down not too far from him with a thumping whoosh.

Ironspike’s glow went from blue to lavender, then to cherry-red, as Mikahl’s anger grew. When the boar came charging at him again, he sent three wicked pulsing blasts into the beast’s neck and shoulder. He tried to spur his mount out of the way, but the terrified horse baulked. The last thing Mikahl sensed before his horse made a desperate twisting leap was the horrible stench of burnt hair from where his blasts had scorched the beast. Ironspike was knocked from his hand and he was smacked gracelessly out of the saddle by a low hanging limb. In the now completely darkened forest, he landed hard on his back.

For a few heartbeats he thought he might have been knocked out, but the deep grunting of the angry beast and the thrum of an arrow being loosed from nearby came to his ringing ears and told him that he was still in the realm of consciousness. As soon as he had his breath back, he scooted himself back against a tree trunk. He strained to see, but it was too dark. Men were shouting, and nearby he heard his horse crashing through the trees. Blasted animal, he thought, Windfoot wouldn’t have frozen up like that. He found that he missed his horse quite badly.

Since he didn’t know where his weapon, or the boar had gone, Mikahl figured that he was all right to wait where he was.  Then someone fired up a torch. The red eyes of the demon-boar were coming in at him again, this time with a vengeance. He felt around him on the ground hoping to find Ironspike, but had to give it up.  He barely had time to roll out of the way.

The demon-boar hit the tree Mikahl had been leaning against so hard that it shook the ground. It didn’t advance after that, it just stood there. Mikahl could smell the acrid stench of the creature’s wounds as it staggered in place right next to him. It was all he could do to hold in the contents of his bladder. Even in the torch-lit darkness the boar’s size wasn’t lost on him. He brushed against its side as he tried to get away. Its coarse bristles felt more like pine needles than hair.

Someone called for him but he couldn’t find his voice to answer. He had a dagger in his boot, but he knew better than to waste the effort. A dagger probably wouldn’t even get through the thick hide of something that big. The only course of action was to get away while the thing was still stunned. If he hadn’t lost the sword, things would be different. As he stumbled blindly away with his hands up to guard his face from branches and thorny brambles, he couldn’t help but feel naked. Without Ironspike he was vulnerable. He knew he wasn’t defenseless without the sword. He was better than everyone on the practice yard. He had grown used to the feeling of invincibility that the magical blade gave him, though. He had grown used to its power. He decided that, if he lived through this, he would try to be more careful. He knew if he died, the power of Ironspike would die with him. Without Ironspike, who would unite the realm into a place of peace? Like it or not, he was the last of Pavreal’s bloodline, and the sword would only recognize him as its wielder. For the first time, he actually understood why Queen Willa was trying so hard to get him wed.

“King Mikahl!” an exasperated voice shouted for the umpteenth time, as long wild shadows went flying about the area. Mikahl heard the call and responded.

“Here,” he rasped back. The Captain found him quickly then.

“Where is it? Where is the beast?” the man asked in a frightful panic.  As an afterthought he added a quick, “Your Majesty.”

The demon-boar grunted beside them and made a low gurgling noise. The slow but solid sounds of trees being pushed aside, of fragile limbs suddenly being shaken loose, and the thump of heavy retreating footfalls followed.

“It’s getting away,” the Captain said. “Should I give chase?” His words sounded far braver than his voice.

“We’ll track it together in the daylight,” Mikahl replied.

The archery captain’s sigh of relief was louder than he intended it to be. Mikahl thought that he could see the man flushing with shame, but didn’t hold it against him; didn’t hold it against him in the least.

A short while later, General Spyra’s guardsmen came storming through the forest like a chaotic parade of giant fire bugs. Ironspike lay not three paces from where Mikahl sat, which saved him some embarrassment on the long ride back to Tip. Captain Finley died from the head injury he sustained when the boar threw him into the tree, and two other men had been wounded when they gave chase by torchlight. Mikahl learned all this by the campfire while munching on the hot greasy haunch of one of the does they’d killed. He raised a toast to the fallen man and then proceeded to down several cups of stout ale before promising the good people of Tip that the demon-boar would be rooted out before the host moved on to Dreen.

General Spyra didn’t like the idea of staying any longer than necessary, but didn’t voice his opinion. Instead, at first light, while Mikahl lay sleeping off the intoxication of the night before, the General organized a party to go kill the beast and get it over with. He sent two hundred men far to the north and had them form a tightly spaced line from the river all the way out to the tree line. They moved southward through the forest at a steady clip most of the morning before finally finding the creature. It was already near death from the wounds Mikahl had inflicted with Ironspike’s magic.

Mikahl woke to the news, brought back from by rider just after midday. A wagon was sent to bring the carcass into town, and upon seeing Mikahl’s hung-over condition, the General informed the men to take their time as they would be staying in Tip for one more night.

Later, after seeing the massive body of the dead boar, the townsfolk of Tip put on a feast for the General, his captains, and the hero of the day, High King Mikahl, who, according to the men, had more or less killed the beast single-handedly. As much as he wanted to, Mikahl didn’t drink more than a goblet of ale that night. He didn’t like the attention these people shoveled onto him for such a trivial deed as defending himself. It was a deed that he couldn’t even credit to his own action. Everything he had done had been a reaction. Nevertheless, the people of Tip were happy and relieved, and that was enough to keep the smile on his face genuine until he found his way to his bedroll.

Five days later they passed through Kasta, a small city and fully fledged trading center that had only tasted a minimum of damage from Pael’s army. “The undead just marched right through,” the people told Mikahl and the General. “They killed a few, but didn’t stop long enough to do much more.”

Pael, it seemed, hadn’t been around when his army of living corpses had passed. All of the people of Kasta knew who Pael was, though. Dreen was just up the road, and of the several thousand that had lived there, only a few hundred had escaped the death and destruction Pael had wrought. The story was that half the people of Kasta had moved to Dreen to claim the shops and farms of their dead families.

The entire two days it took for them to march the troops around Kasta, Mikahl was swamped with invitations to enjoy the hospitality of every noble, and some not so noble, house in the city. Both afternoons were spent wading down the avenues with a small detachment of Blacksword soldiers, through the sea of gathered crowds that just wanted to see and cheer the great young king who had defeated Pael.

In the evenings they went out of their way to avoid the persistent city folk, but it didn’t matter. The crowd came to them. The last time Mikahl had seen this many Valleyans gathered in one place, they had been living corpses, wielding everything from farm implements to two-handed swords, trying to kill him and Queen Willa’s soldiers. Now they were wielding the Valleyan banner, a dark shield on a red and yellow checked background, and they were cheering the very people they had been trying to kill. The Valleyans had been attacking Queen Willa and Highwander even before Pael had come along. It amazed him what a common enemy could do to get folks on the same side.

Besides being accepted by the Valleyan people, the only good thing to come of the attention Mikahl’s arrival was generating was the young, proud, and fully trained destrier that was presented to him that second evening. Thunder was the beautiful animal’s name, and Mikahl graciously accepted the horse. He had a squire get the information of the house that had given him the gift and hand wrote a letter of appreciation.

Thunder had the ill luck of being owned now by Mikahl. Thunder had heavy horseshoes to fill. Mikahl would take excellent care of the creature, but he would also compare the horse’s every action and detail to Windfoot. Mikahl had already vowed to retrieve Windfoot from the Skyler Clan village when he had the time. Thunder would never find a more caring owner, but when Windfoot came home, Thunder would probably spend a lot more time in the stable than he was used to. Windfoot and Mikahl had survived a lot together.

Mikahl was glad to get Kasta behind them. The road to Dreen seemed to be as crowded as the city had been. Many a cart and wagon was passed on the way to the Red City. Swine herds, goat herds, people making the journey on foot as well. Nearly all of them stopped to cheer Mikahl as he and the Blacksword detail rode past. When they finally reached Dreen, an escort of Valleyan cavalry led them from the outskirts of the fringe settlements into the big red clay brick wall that surrounded the capital city itself. Beyond the city, to the north and west, the Wilder Mountains rose up out of the arid plain.

When they approached the wall Mikahl was awestruck, not by its height, but by the amount of space it enclosed. It was said that, on foot, a man might take most of a week to walk the top of the wall all the way around the city. Mikahl didn’t doubt it. The main gates and the sections of wall to either side of them had been newly rebuilt. The fresh clay brick was a lighter shade of pink than the weathered brick around the gates. And the thick wood planks that had been bolted to the old rusty iron bands of the gate itself were still fresh and white. All that could be seen rising above the thirty foot wall were two crenellated towers that were set deep into the city.

When they passed through the gates, Mikahl saw that the wall was half as wide as it was tall. Clanking iron portcullises were being raised on the inside. Once clear of them he found that the Red City was not misnamed. Nearly all of the well-spaced buildings were made of the same clay brick as the outer wall. No building was higher than two stories save for the twin towers, which reached up out of what could only be King Broderick’s modest castle. The streets here were not crowded, and every other building appeared to be empty and abandoned. Most every structure boasted a fenced corral; some held prized Valleyan horse stock, others held sheep or goats. There were a few head of cattle here and there and more than one weary looking bull, but mostly there were horses ranging in the pens. The clay streets were wide and pocked with the hoof prints and cart tracks of the millions of animals that had been driven through over the years. The bulk of High King Mikahl’s host made an encampment near the east gates where they entered the city. King Broderick’s cavalry attachment led the others—King Mikahl, General Spyra, two archery units, and Spyra’s fifty man guard attachment—through the city toward the castle. They had to stop for the night before reaching it, and it was well into the afternoon the next day when they finally came to the unimpressive head-high wall that surrounded Broderick’s abode.

A pair of full-size stallions rearing to fight decorated the ornate double gate. They were a study in detail and craftsmanship. The dark stone they were carved from was veined with blood red and pinkish white. The color went well with all the red clay around them. Mikahl found that he wanted to get out of Thunder’s saddle and examine them closer, but decided against it. General Spyra eased close to him, and as they waited for the gate guards to announce them to the castle, he spoke.

“Notice that the people who live inside the red wall are a little quieter about your arrival?” The General grinned. The sun reflected off of his bald head into Mikahl’s eyes. Mikahl had to squint when he looked back at him.

“Aye. Days of being cheered, then all of a sudden only stares and nods inside the wall. Why?”

“Outside the walls,” the General leaned in close so that he could whisper, “the craven king’s power is thin. They would put you in his seat in a moment, I assure you. But here, inside the walls, Broderick has thousands of ears and a much stronger base of support. He’ll lick your boots, but he’ll do it in private.”

If the capital of Valleya was unimpressive compared to Xwarda or Castlemont (before Pael had destroyed them), then King Broderick was a total letdown. The large, fleshy man was robed in wrinkled layers of golden cloth trimmed in red. His black hair and beard were thick, curly, and unkempt, and the people who were gathered around him at the top of the castle’s entry stair looked about as happy to be there as they would at their own execution.

Mikahl had an urge and followed it. Before the craven king could say a word, he spurred Thunder forward and quickly closed the space between him and the foot of King Broderick’s entry stair. The Valleyan King’s Guard was surprised by the move, but more than one of them stepped up, with hand on hilt, ready, if a little reluctantly, to defend their big sloppy king. Mikahl drew Ironspike and the purplish glow of its blade was clearly visible in the midday sun. The people around Broderick, guardsmen included, instantly shrunk back from him. It was as if they all half-expected Mikahl to take off the man’s head in that instant. King Broderick himself seemed only slightly impressed by Mikahl’s display. Still, he was more than a little nervous as he glanced over at his court announcer and gave a sharp nod.  “Thump! Thump! Thump!” sounded the butt of a staff on the sun-baked clay surface. “All hail High King Mikahl Collum, the Blessed Uniter.”

Reluctantly, King Broderick went to a knee. Every person in sight of the scene followed suit, save for one, a slim man who was dressed quite regally and standing in the castle’s entry way behind King Broderick’s retinue. Mikahl’s eyes met his and the man gave a nod of respect, no more, no less. Mikahl smiled and returned the gesture.

At least there’s one here not ready to lick my boots, Mikahl thought, and found that he had more respect for the one in the doorway than anyone else he’d met here so far.

“Rise,” Mikahl commanded with forced authority in his voice. He had to bite back a laugh when he heard General Spyra mumble under his breath, “He might be too fat to get up.”

General Spyra was correct, for two men quickly stepped up on each side of the Valleyan king and helped him to his feet. All around them, the Valleyan people started to cheer. The look on Broderick’s bright red face showed that this wasn’t the introduction he had envisioned, and that he was none too pleased about the situation. The smiles on the faces around the King of Valleya showed Mikahl that it was an introduction they had enjoyed, though. King Broderick had been put in his place swiftly, and publicly, right from the start, and those who’d seen it, especially the curious man in the doorway, had enjoyed it immensely. Mikahl wasn’t really amused, though. In fact, he found that he was disgusted by the way Broderick carried himself.

… Continued…

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Kings, Queens, Heroes, & Fools
(Wardstone Trilogy, Book Two)
by M. R. Mathias
4.6 stars – 114 reviews!
Kindle Price: $4.88

From The Bestselling Author of “The Sword And The Dragon” Comes Book 2 of The Wardstone Trilogy: Kings, Queens, Heroes, & Fools – 4.6 Stars on 114 Reviews! Sample For Free Now!

4.6 stars – 114 Reviews
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Kings, Queens, Heroes, & Fools (The Wardstone Trilogy Book Two)

Join Hyden Hawk Skyler, and some great new friends, on an adventurous quest, over land and sea, to find the Silver Skull of Zorellin.Fight with Mikahl, Ironspike, and fierce King Jarrek as they try to free the enslaved people of Wildermont from King Ra’Gren and his Dakaneese Overlords.Patrol the skies with Shaella, and her new black dragon, Vrot. With her father’s spell books, and the Priests of Kraw, she decides to aid King Ra’Gren, while scheming to free her lover, Gerard, from the hellish Nethers.Demonic love, valiant battles, and foolhardy heroics await readers in this 175k word (600+ page) continuation of the epic ‘Wardstone Trilogy’ that was written in a Texas prison cell, by author, M. R. Mathias.

Also available for Kindle:  The Sword and the Dragon – The Wardstone Trilogy Book One – Over 200 Rave Reviews & Just 99 Cents!

Reviews

“After reading all three of the Wardstone novels I find myself wanting more. I love Hyden, Mikahl, and Phen. This is a great fantasy trilogy. Well written and worth every penny. The characters may never leave me — Review of The Wizard and the Warlord – The Wardstone Trilogy Book Three” — Liz Cornwell, Amazon Review

“The battle scenes, brawls, mysteries, and adventures kept me turning page after page. Yet it was the close relationships between the main characters that makes this book transcend beyond adventure” — Dr. Sheri Kaye Hoff

About The Author

M.R. Mathias rose from unknown to award-winning, best-selling author at a pace most authors can only dream about. He is a prolific writer of epic fantasy novels, novellas, and short stories. Despite his busy writing, publishing, and promotional schedule Mathias continues to aid his fellow indie authors by posting about their books at Twitter and Facebook etc.
He shared his considerable knowledge of self-promotion in publishing The First Ten Steps. The book has become an important indie guide for navigating the often murky waters of using social media sites to get your eBook in front of avid readers.
Mathias has taken cross promotion to a new level in his “Indie Kindy” giveaways where he gives away a FREE Kindle Touch and or Kindle Fire loaded with independently published books. These events create a great deal of interest for the authors involved and to independently published books as a whole.
It is a pleasure working with M.R. Mathias and watching his amazing run at the top of the Amazon best seller lists.
William R. Potter
Indie author
Founder of the Independent Author Network

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