Tumble Into a World Where Magic Rules and Hope is Hard to Find
Marked
by Fortune
Tumble into a dystopian world where magic rules and hope is hard to find.
By Ann GimpelTumble into a dystopian world where magic rules and hope is hard to find.
Dream Shadow Press
95K words
Release Date: 11/10/15
Genre: Dystopian Urban Fantasy RomanceiTunes
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Also available on ARe and Google Play
Book Description:
Magic levies a steep price on anyone brave
enough or stupid enough to dabble in it.
Fleeing the tide of doom wiping out
humanity, Amanda and her family escape to a remote corner of California, where
they eke out a hardscrabble existence. With her parents at each other’s throats
and her brother mysteriously gone, Amanda runs up against malevolent power
beyond her wildest imaginings. Captured by the undead, she’s about to join
their ranks when Ned shows up.
Attraction ignites—hot, urgent,
delicious—but celibacy may well be the price of Ned’s magic, and he can’t risk
his power. Or can he? Even though he stands to lose everything, Ned doesn’t
hesitate after Tantalus—one of the insidiously beautiful dark gods—kidnaps
Amanda. Defying a direct order from his wizard battle lord, he goes after the
woman he loves. Even if she can’t ever be his, he’ll be damned if he’ll leave
her to the dark god’s whims.
Excerpt:
Ned crouched amid the remains
of what was once downtown Sacramento, using a convenient, partly-decimated
building as cover. The rest of his unit hid in close proximity—at least he
hoped they did. A low, whistling noise ratcheted his heart into hyper drive.
Enemy magic. Maintaining his crouch, he spun, searching the late afternoon
gloom for clues. Not quite sure what tipped him off, he leapt out of the way just
before a concrete block exploded, showering him with debris.
“Whew! Way too close.” The
words tore out of him before he could stop them.
He drew his lips into a
disgusted snarl and wondered for the thousandth time how he, a human mage, ever
got mixed up with the wizards’ war.
Because
the bastards didn’t give me a choice.
Sweat trickled down his
forehead. His leather headband caught some of it, but a few drops fell into his
eyes. They stung like hell, and he shook his head to disperse the salty liquid.
The beginnings of a headache throbbed behind one temple.
“Landarik.” Ned focused his
commander’s name into his mouthpiece. “Where are you?”
“Right behind you.” A voice
dripped sarcasm into Ned’s ear.
“Son of a bitch.”
Ned whipped around. Landarik
stood so close, Ned’s braids slapped against the wizard’s helmet. “I wish you
wouldn’t do that,” Ned sputtered through clenched teeth. “I hate when you sneak
up on me. Especially when it could’ve been one of them. You’re lucky I didn’t blast you.”
“Like your puny human magic
would’ve made a dent. Cut the shit. 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’ve 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 have no fucking idea what the goddess had up her sleeve when she
created those like you.”
“Fine. Neither do I. Now can I
go?”
“I release you—but only because
you’re more worthless than usual. Return 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 a small building a hundred
yards away.
“How can you know
so…precisely?” Ned sputtered.
Landarik tipped the visor of
his helmet up. Extraordinary blue eyes shot darts at Ned, and the sharp-boned
features characteristic of the wizard 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 managed yourself better,
you’d hear where the enemy is hiding.” He snorted. “Sometimes I find it
difficult to fathom how you’re still alive.”
“You and me both,” Ned mumbled.
Sketching a rectangular portal
in the hot, dusty air, he jumped through into the Ways, picturing the wizards’
caves as he did so. Wizards developed the Ways thousands of years ago so they
could travel to distant locations. Their harmonics were so well matched to
galactic magnetics, they remained fully functional despite minimal maintenance.
As he sped through the
dimension carrying him to a few hours of safety, Ned’s empty stomach clenched
in anger. It wasn’t fair for Landarik to expect him to know everything the
vetted wizard warriors did. Most of them were hundreds—if not thousands—of
years old, while he was a mere…well, something. Young, anyway. In truth, he
wasn’t precisely sure of his age. Wizards lived so long they didn’t bother
keeping those types of records.
Ned didn’t know if it was
fortune, or her opposite, but he’d drawn his first breath in a wizard
stronghold. He had little memory of his first few years, but around the time he
turned five, one of the wizards—the acolyte master, Karras—took notice of the
little human who carted power after him the same way other youngsters dragged
beloved toys.
The discovery he held magic
within him turned out to be a two-edged sword. His mother was a normal human,
and the wizards kicked her out of their stronghold after she refused to divulge
his father’s name. Ned offered her points for courage. If she’d given up his
father’s name, the wizards would’ve hunted him down and probably killed him—for
having the temerity to be intimate with one of their servants.
Once his mother was out of the
way, his lessons in mage craft took off like a shot and never really stopped,
but catching up with the wizards proved impossible, particularly since they
reminded him about his inferiority on a regular basis.
Things may well have gone
differently had his teachers been other human mages. Perhaps they would’ve been
more sensitive to his skills—and less critical of his efforts. Come to think of
it, maybe their teaching style would’ve suited his magic far better. It took
several years, but Ned finally figured out that his gifts manifested quite
differently than the wizards’. He fought off a wave of bitterness and severed
his line of thought. Surely other human mages existed—his father, for
example—but he’d never met one in the flesh.
He sent magic spiraling outward
to make certain he was still on course. Infernals might try to sabotage the
Ways, despite maintaining their own traveling portals. “They’d have to get in
here, first,” Ned said, talking to himself. “It wouldn’t be easy.”
The Ways required special
spells and an affinity established by one of the wizards. Without those things,
they’d refuse to open. Ned wished he knew more about other races, like humans
for instance. Or elves. All his history lessons had focused solely on wizards,
which made sense because everyone else in his classes was one. He’d felt quite
the misfit. Worse, wizards weren’t fond of humans and rarely missed an
opportunity to pound the point home.
The deceleration presaging his
arrival began, tugging at his midsection. Ned summoned magic to call up a
portal. It formed slowly because he was so tapped out. How long since his last
rest? He did some quick calculations and came up with sixty-five hours. Wizard
physiology was different. They could last five or six days on the battlefield
without a break. No matter how hard he tried, Ned had never managed much more
than three. Even then, the last hours turned into such a struggle, they were
hardly worth it. Ned set his teeth in a grim line. Like he’d told Landarik, he
was surprised he was still alive too.
His portal glowed. Warm and
inviting, it radiated a soft blue light, the color of many of his workings. Ned
peeled the door back and jumped through, so dead on his feet his eyes were
half-shut.
The minute he stepped into the
flickering, magic-driven torchlight of the sloppily excavated cave the wizards
used as a re-supply station, Ned knew something was wrong. He felt the subtle
presence of something malevolent in the air currents moving through their
subterranean quarters. He didn’t close off the portal—just in case. Sibilant
swishing from deep in the shadows dragged a last bit of adrenaline into his
bloodstream. He felt sick, jittery, but at least he was wide-awake again.
A horny snout came into view,
accompanied by a hissing shriek as the thing raced out of the darkness right at
him. Running on nerves and instinct, Ned didn’t stop to examine his adversary.
The thing intended to kill him. He jumped backward—body surprisingly nimble
given his exhaustion—and sealed off his portal before he resurrected the spell
that had carried him from the battlefield. Because the Ways required a
destination, he visualized Sacramento. He could always correct his course en
route.
What
in the nine hells was in the cave?
Ned cleared his mind. He
examined the feel of the wrongness. He didn’t sense Infernals. Not exactly. No,
it was more like one of the trogs: a cross between trolls and warthogs.
Infernals kept them for pets. It was a safe bet if a trog were in the entry
hall of the wizards’ cave, its masters weren’t far distant.
Ned shuddered. He’d fought
trogs more than once in this war. Their highly poisonous bite could kill on
contact if it hit a key spot. His Comparative Zoology instructor at the wizard
stronghold in the Carpathian Alps had taught him about genetic catastrophes
developed in the Infernals’ labs. Trogs were only one of the perverted
creatures born from those unnatural experiments. Closing his eyes, Ned
visualized the wall chart with trogs, wargs, the undead…
Why
bother?
Can’t
change any of it.
Where
can I go? Not back to the battle. I’d be worth about
as much as a drowned dragon.
He needed to pick a destination,
and fast, so he could grab a couple hours of badly needed sleep. Sacramento
wouldn’t do it, even if he skirted the worst of the fighting. The large urban
areas weren’t any worse than anywhere else, but he’d need to stay sharp to
avoid danger. Right now, he wasn’t.
Ned racked his mind, calling up
the geography of California. He’d almost decided to head for the Sierra Nevada
Mountains—a place Karras took him years ago—when he rethought things. No matter
how much he wanted to retreat somewhere safe, he needed to let Landarik know
about the breach in their cave. With a great deal of reluctance, he linked what
was left of his magic to the frequency of the Ways, and reiterated his command
for them to take him back to Sacramento.
Ned didn’t like the wizards any
more than they cared about him, but they were the only family he’d ever known.
Despite all the times he’d wished Landarik would die a slow, painful death, he
did value the concept of duty. Ned shook his head to jar himself into a more
wakeful state. Thinking pain might rouse him, he bit his lower lip until he
tasted blood, but it didn’t help much.
He still felt like one of the
undead.…
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