Fortune's Scion: New Adult Urban Fantasy
Against stiff
odds, Ned learns different isn’t necessarily bad and true love has a way of
shining through.
Buy Link: Desert Breeze Publishing
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85,000 words
Buy Link: Desert Breeze Publishing
Buy Link: All Romance e-books
Buy Link: Amazon
Genre: New Adult Urban Fantasy85,000 words
Raised by wizards who never missed an opportunity to
remind him of his deficiencies, Ned grows up believing his mage skills are
seriously lacking. Conscripted at an early age, he fears it’s a back-handed way
to ensure he sustains an honorable death in battle.
Struggling against prejudice, insidious lies and lack of
knowledge about his mage powers—which are really quite different from wizard
magic—Ned finds ways to keep going. His first mission away from the wizards
teaches him he’s stronger and more resourceful than he thought. Against stiff
odds, he learns different isn’t necessarily bad and true love has a way of
shining through.
Excerpt:
Ned
crouched amidst the remains of what had been downtown Sacramento, using a
convenient half-decimated building as cover. The rest of his unit hid scattered
-- or so he assumed -- in close proximity. A low whistling noise made his heart
beat like a mad thing. Enemy magic. Maintaining his crouch, he spun, eyes
searching the late afternoon gloom for clues. Not quite sure what tipped him
off, he leapt out of the way. A concrete block exploded, showering him with
debris.
"Whew!
Way too close," he mumbled, wondering for the thousandth time how he, a
human mage, ever became mixed up with the wizards' war. Sweat trickled down his
forehead. His leather headband caught some of it, but a few drops fell into his
eyes. They stung. He shook his head to disperse the salty liquid. The
beginnings of a headache throbbed behind one temple. "Landarik," he
whispered into his mouthpiece, "Where are you?"
"Right
behind you." A voice dripped sarcasm into Ned's ear.
He
whipped around. Landarik stood so close, Ned's braids slapped against the
wizard's helmet. "I wish you wouldn't do that," Ned said through
clenched teeth. "I hate it when you sneak up on me. 'Specially when it
could have been one of them. You're
lucky I didn't blast you."
"You
called me. What do you want?" Speaking through the slit in his bronzed
helmet, Landarik looked like a robot. Only his blond braids, with debris
tangled in them, ruined the automaton image. He must have noticed Ned's stare
because Landarik gathered his ratty braids and tossed them over his shoulders.
"I'm
beat. Request permission to return to the caves."
"Mage
or no," Landarik grunted, "you humans are more work than you're
worth. I release you. Be back no later than first light." Whistling
sounded again. Without apparent thought or effort, Landarik raised a hand. A
bolt of power flew from his fingertips and vaporized half a small building a
hundred yards away.
"How
can you know so... precisely?" Ned sputtered.
The wizard tipped the visor of his helmet up.
Extraordinary blue eyes and the sharp-boned features characteristic of his race
twisted in irritation. "I've told you and told you," he lectured in a
patronizing voice that grated on Ned's nerves, "hold your inner parts
still, human. If you could manage yourself better, you would be able to hear
where the enemy is hiding." He snorted. "Sometimes I find it
difficult to fathom how you are still alive."
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