Tides of Infinity
208 pages
English

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208 pages
English

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Description

Raised in Peyennar, far from the settled parts of the nation of Penthar, Luc Anaris had no idea he would be thrust into a quest vital to the nation's survival. Millennia after the Furies were first defeated, rumors of their arising surfaced. When the capital is sacked, Luc is called on to pursue their enemies and an artifact of great power. To succeed he must embrace the truth of his existence.

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Publié par
Date de parution 12 septembre 2013
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781622873937
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0480€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

THE TIDES OF INFINITY
Matt Thomas


First Edition Design Publishing
THE WAR OF THE FURIES

Book One
THE TIDES OF INFINITY



by
MATT THOMAS


First Edition Design Publishing
The War of The Furies Series
Book One: The Tides of Infinity
Copyright ©2013 Matt Thomas
ISBN 978-1622873-94-4 PRINT
ISBN 978-1622-873-93-7 EBOOK

LCCN 2013948422

August 2013

Published and Distributed by
First Edition Design Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 20217, Sarasota, FL 34276-3217
www.firsteditiondesignpublishing.com



ALL R I G H T S R E S E R V E D. No p a r t o f t h i s b oo k pub li ca t i o n m a y b e r e p r o du ce d, s t o r e d i n a r e t r i e v a l s y s t e m , o r t r a n s mit t e d i n a ny f o r m o r by a ny m e a ns ─ e l e c t r o n i c , m e c h a n i c a l , p h o t o - c o p y , r ec o r d i n g, or a ny o t h e r ─ e x ce pt b r i e f qu ot a t i o n i n r e v i e w s , w i t h o ut t h e p r i o r p e r mi ss i on o f t h e a u t h o r or publisher .

Table of Contents


PROLOGUE — REUNION
CHAPTER 1 — PEYENNAR
CHAPTER 2 — UNDER SEIGE
CHAPTER 3 — INTO THE WILD
CHAPTER 4 — ALDOREN’S WATCH
CHAPTER 5 — AFTER TWILIGHT
CHAPTER 6 — THE BROKEN SIGIL
CHAPTER 7 — THE GATEWAY NORTH
CHAPTER 8 — LORDS OF VALINCE
CHAPTER 9 — A MESSAGE
CHAPTER 10 — NEWS OUT OF THE NORTH
CHAPTER 11 — SHAIAR
CHAPTER 12 — THE SHAPING
CHAPTER 13 — PERDITION’S SHADOW
CHAPTER 14 — NEW ARRIVALS
CHAPTER 15 — THE FACE OF RUIN
CHAPTER 16 — IN DESTINY’S WAKE
CHAPTER 17 — THE SONS OF THUNDER
CHAPTER 18 — SIREN’S LANDING
CHAPTER 19 — TO PEYENNAR
CHAPTER 20 — GLIMMERS OF ARDIL
CHAPTER 21 — BINDING THE FIRST
CHAPTER 22 — TERMS
CHAPTER 23 — AN ANSWER
CHAPTER 24 — PARTING
CHAPTER 25 — THE LAST DEFENSE OF PEYENNAR
EPILOGUE — THE STORM
A Fragment from the Annals

We marched for peace;
We heard the thunder.
We read the signs,
And were forced to ponder:

Rumors of the Furies renting the skies,
Earth, War, and Ruin
Charged by the Unmaker to slaughter.
The Black Hand, the Black Breath,
Keeper of Time and Emissary of death.

Then came visions of the One:
The Herald of Chaos
And Holder of the Winds:

White light to blind,
And the Storm to answer.
Armed with a sword of the Builders’ seed
And the Ruling Rod of the Ages to Redeem.

Welcome Chaos

PROLOGUE — REUNION

When the world was young and the bitter, grinding weight of the ages was an ever-present shadow vilifying and corrupting the hearts of men, a cloudburst hammered the Shoulder of Peyennar, an imposing outpost hidden on the doorstep of the Mournful Peaks in the heights of the northern Pentharan mountain range, south of the Forlorn Wood and east of the Plains of Power. The stronghold’s twin banners rippled in the fury: a single sparrow perched atop a lone branch; a silver spear, silent on a battle-torn field. Together the two ensigns danced in tandem above the hold’s apex and the tower that stretched from the base of the foundation—empty now but with a menacing watchfulness that was there even when not whipped by the wind and rain. For the third of three consecutive days and nights the rain continued to beat at the hold, a jet black structure carved in the rock face that would have appeared a part of the Peaks to anyone gazing eastward towards Peyennar. Few knew a fortress was hidden in the midst of the storm. Silent. Brooding.
Watchful.
Westward under the shadow of the hold a strange settlement bore the wind and rain in an outcrop hidden beneath tall evergreens. There, a cluster of roofed buildings lined an orderly lane. The village green stood proudly at the heart, balancing the line of solid homes and modest establishments, the village inn, butcher, cobbler, and seamstress. With fewer than a hundred residents, everything in Peyennar appeared to have a purpose, none more important perhaps than to collectively stand against the fury of the Peaks and the isolation from the plains below.
Near the edge of the village not far from the green a boy was attempting to shield himself from the elements. Although he found it next to impossible to penetrate the misty spray ahead through the downpour, he still found his gaze pulled to the firmament and the currents circling the world without end. The ominous airstream held the memories of thousands, some claimed, but it was from somewhere infinitely remote within that the voices of eternity and memory heralded the unfolding history of Man.
The sound of thunder above the Pentharan mainland to the west brought him out of the reverie. Remembering himself, he quickened his steps, crossing the settlement’s outskirts along a narrow lane the Oathbound used for transferring supplies to the hold. Although no one saw him passing under the trees, there was a safety to Peyennar that at times felt disarming. Rumor from the far west did not often reach the village, but what word came, when it came, spoke of ruin: bands of Ardan and Earthbound sweeping through the countryside sowing bedlam. Here, though, they had been untouched by it. Safe. The thought should not have troubled him, but it did.
Struggling through the tempest, Luc Anaris pressed on. At his location near the western edge of the village, Peyennar sat concealed in the heart of the ancient wood, trees that seemed almost timeless—the spruce, mingled with the maple, willow, pine, and evergreen; what little light penetrated the forest was lost in the heart of the wood even a stone’s throw from the nearest window. But caught up in the surging celestial forces, he hardly noticed. That was not to say the unsettling undertones were lost on him. The world was changing and war was the device driving these people to flee their homeland for the mountain haven. Any other time he would have grieved for them, with them. Now he had a sense of duty and purpose to drive him forward.
From the heart of the village a man in his prime would have found the hike to the western escarpment a considerable distance, but Luc’s strides were nowhere near as deliberate or even. Already he had been on the trail roughly half again that time and had hardly reached the midway point. The biting wind did not help matters and the speed with which night was falling shocked him. Still he made efforts to keep moving. He supposed if it came to it he could always turn aside and make for the Acriel farm as he had originally intended. You must not fear the night, his father often maintained. Do this and welcome your kin as you were meant to, Luc’s brother, Far, had added with a smile and a nod of encouragement.
Absently he stepped over a hooked branch nearly a foot thick that must have broken off sometime during the storm. As he carefully made his way, he considered the welcome he would receive when he returned with the news. Generally the village residents were a selfless lot who did not spare the notion of fame or fortune a second thought, both of which Peyennar had in short supply anyway. Oh, those in the hold were a separate, secretive lot. They were sworn to the will of Alingdor. Luc, on the other hand, had never quite fit in. He was not apprenticed as the few other village youths were. He had no skill uniquely his own. He sometimes wondered if his father and mother had given the matter any serious thought. Reason enough to see this through, he thought. Either that or announce his intention to leave. The mere mention would have unhinged the village Elders and the Oathbound both. No one left Peyennar, let alone a boy not ten years past his name day. No one.
Pausing under the cover of an especially bulky spruce, Luc attempted to ignore the hissing air gusting through the wood. Somewhere along the way he’d picked up a rock in his right boot. Wiping the rain out of his face, for the first time he realized he was not feeling the chill precisely, and hardly seemed to feel anything at all. After removing the pesky stone, he tried moving his toes but thought it best to work the warmth into his hands first. Though the waning autumn season had not yet turned to winter, the crisp air speeding in from off the Peaks was taking a toll. For some reason he almost thought he smelled the fresh scent of bread baking in Gam’s brick oven and not the earthen odor of evergreens. Rubbing his hands together seemed to help a little, but he could do nothing for his sodden clothes. While he caught his breath he seriously considered abandoning the entire effort, but the way back was almost as far and it was as if forces beyond his ability to control were compelling him onward. Alone, he tried to get his bearings, but his vision was obscured by the downward spray and he felt a little light-headed whenever he moved too fast. Straining, he managed to lean himself into an upright position against the base of the tree, waiting for a lull in the storm. There were others coming. He was certain of it. Now if only he could summon the will and belief to continue.
For the rangers of Atan Martyre, Pentharan autumns, which were not by nature especially cold, might seem a romp in a springtime garden, but the untamed Pentharan wild amidst the Peaks was no place for the timid, especially one used to the comfort of the hearth and a warm glass of milk before bed. At this hour with the rain beating down on him and the sky darkening by the minute, he had no way to pinpoint where he was precisely and could only follow the path blindly. Should he turn back? he wondered. Make for the Acriel’s? Considerable distances either way, he knew. And no less risky than going forward.
Just standing was an exercise that sent his raw senses reeling. Silently pleading his father did not thrash him when he learned of his son’s foolhardiness, he took a hesitant first step, difficult as it was. Numb, he stumbled forward. The rough path’s gradual rise peaked at the edge of Peyennar where it descended sharply and eventually gave way to the plains northeast of Alingdor. G

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