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Fate of the Tyrant Snippet Two

Here’s the second snippet from Fate of the Tyrant.  You can find the first one here.  You can find the blurb for Fate of the Tyrant here.

 

Captain Aerion Swordbreaker

“Captain Swordbreaker, should we pursue?”

Aerion looked over at Sergeant Miller, his second section leader.  “No,” he said in reply, even as his single eye went back to the withdrawing enemy.  Ghost Company had clashed with several of Hector’s mercenary raiders since the first snows began in the fall.  As the fighting had grown more and more desperate, Aerion had learned better than to pursue an organized enemy.  Some of Lady Katarina Emberhill’s forces had not been so cautious and their bodies lay cold in the shadows of the forests, scattered where they had fallen.

“Form them up,” he called out to Jasen, the company’s First Sergeant, who snapped out commands to the section sergeants.  When Jasen turned back, Aerion spoke in a lower voice, “Who did we lose?”

“Donat and Eryk,” Jasen answered.  “Gaja is down with an arrow to the leg, but he should pull through.  The rest are minor wounds.”

“Be sure of that,” Aerion said with a grave voice.  Just the past week they had lost two men to wounds that should have received attention. Neither man had thought to seek help, or at least, not until it was too late.  He rubbed one hand across his face.  “A few more seconds and we would have had the bastard.”

Rumor had it that Covle Darkbit led this particular band of ravagers.  While most of the Usurper’s mercenary raiding bands had grown smaller over the past couple months from casualties and desertion, this one had grown larger, the ranks swelled by bandits and mercenaries who knew that Darkbit would keep them alive and better fed.  Darkbit’s men had slaughtered men, women, and children, burned food, and killed far too many of Lady Katarina’s smaller patrols.  The man had become a revenant, hitting where Lady Katarina’s forces were weakest and then disappearing.

Aerion had hoped to get the bastard to engage his company in a real fight, which was why he had set up the surprise ambush.  “Any enemy wounded?” Aerion asked as he saw the appointed squad return from their sweep of the fallen.

“Two,” Jasen said.  “One won’t survive, the other can’t walk, probably why they left him.”

Aerion grimaced at that.  The mercenaries tended to leave their wounded behind.  They knew that Lady Katarina’s forces would tend to them.  The ones they could convict of crimes were punished, but there were few enough survivors from most of the worst atrocities.  Lady Katarina had a small prisoner of war camp located near Zielona Gora.  To date, Aerion knew that there were another two hundred mouths to feed there… along with a company of troops to guard them.

Hector’s mercenaries didn’t take prisoners.  They killed the wounded and anyone tried to surrender.

Aerion just nodded, though part of him wanted to leave both of the mercenaries to die.  Yet he had to set a better example than that for his men.  He knew that more than a few of them wouldn’t hesitate to kill the enemy wounded.  Too many of his company had lost family and friends, either in the past two months or in the previous cycles of Lord Hector’s occupation.

Bad enough to strip the dead, he thought, yet the enemy weapons, armor, and most importantly, their warm clothing, would save lives.

He tried not to think to hard about leaving the bodies where they lay, but the truth was that with the ground frozen so hard, it would be impossible to bury them.  If he and his men remained in place long enough to construct pyres, they would spend the night in the open and the lengthening night and growing cold would sap their energy and leave them less prepared for the next fight.

Besides, he thought as his eye picked out movement in the shadows of the trees off the road, the scavengers will pick the bones clean before sunset.

He just hoped that the scavengers were all animals… what with some of the darker rumors.

***

 

Xavien Tarken, Herald of Andoral Elhonas

Fortress of Armak Zhul, Noriel

13th of  Ravin, Cycle 1000 Post Sundering

 

The winter winds howled at the sides of Armak Zhul like a mad, living thing bent on destroying the mountain fortress and undoing the labor of thousands of cycles.  The winds might well have that intent, Xavien thought, certainly it wouldn’t be alone in that regard if it was.

The raised voice of an angry Armen brought him back to the matter at hand.

“I will not kowtow to your demands, woman,” Warlord Sakan Alk snarled.  The big Armen chieftain clearly misunderstood his position in the world, Xavien noted.

Andoral Elhonas’s consort moved so quickly that even Xavien barely kept up.  She spun and drew her blade in a single, smooth motion.  The blade’s long reach allowed her to rake it across Sakan Alk’s belly without having to take even a single step closer.

As the Armen chieftain let out a sharp scream and pawed at his spilling intestines, she whipped the blade back around to remove his head.

The other Armen gathered before her were spattered with hot, sticky blood.  They didn’t show fear, but Xavien did see shock on their faces.  They were not used to women who would strike a man, much less one who could take down a fighting man of Sakan Alk’s caliber.  The more fools they, Xavien thought, the women are the more dangerous of the species.

“Rentak Khobis,” Seraphai said as she flicked the blood off of her sword.  The red metal of its blade seemed to pulse in an odd fashion.  Xavien wished he could study it, but he knew better than to ask.  This was Makhvili Dzala, Andoral’s Blade of Power.  Even as Herald, he would not be allowed to touch it, much less to study it.

The Armen called stepped over the twitching body of Aratak Sul.  He bowed his head slightly, “Yes, my queen?”  Xavien felt no surprise that Rentak Khobis remembered to use the honorific.  Whatever their other limitations, the Armen were capable of learning when the consequences for failure were rubbed in their faces.

“You are now the Warlord of the Sepak Armen.  Follow the commands I gave to your predecessor or meet the same fate,” Seraphai snapped.  As the Armen warrior nomad nodded, she sat back in her throne. “You are dismissed.”

She waited as the Armen withdrew, dragging the corpse of their former Warlord with them, all but the severed head which had come to rest in the corner.  Xavien wondered if that would be kept as a trophy and displayed on the walls of Armak Zhul or thrown off the side as garbage.

That is the fun part about the new Consort, Xavien thought, I never know exactly what she has planned.  A meticulous planner himself, Xavien viewed her actions with a mix of amusement and fear.  Just in her arrival to court, she had thrown so many of his plans into disarray.

Not that he viewed her as a threat.  Xavien had no desire to rise above his position under Andoral Elhonas.  The powerful spirit rewarded such ambition with death, after all.  It wasn’t as if Xavien could be the Consort, and that only left challenging the ten thousand cycle old spirit himself.  Herald is quite sufficient, especially when I’ll rule over the five duchies in his name, Xavien thought.

The confidence born of knowing his place allowed Xavien to work with his new Queen quite effectively.

Not so with some of Andoral’s other supporters.  Some had challenged Seraphai almost as directly as the late Sakan Alk.  Others had attempted more indirect methods of her removal.  All of them had died.  Xavien suspected that was to his master’s intent, a way to challenge them all, to thin out those who might be slower, less intelligent, or disloyal.

Certainly there could be no doubt that their master had chosen Seraphai.  She carried Makhvili Dzala, which would be impossible without his will behind it.  Besides that, there was the irony of having her as his consort, the one with the combined blood of the line of High Kings and Maghali Mede, the Ancient King, as his consort… the spirits of his enemies must writhe at their inability to prevent it.

“Are you certain of this plan, Herald?” Seraphai asked.

Xavien looked up and met her eyes.  Their violet color intrigued him, apparently a natural coloration.  “I am certain,” Xavien said.  The new plan was merely a refined version of his original plan.  The chaos he had sown in the Five Duchies had left them ripe for conquest.  While he had met some setbacks along the way, he knew he could pull off the invasion of Masov with little opposition.  With the Lonely Isle isolated, it would only take a few months to wear them down and regain the foothold.  After that, he could link up with his Noric allies in fallen Taral and invade the Grand Duchy of Boir, followed by the Duchy of Asador.  In all likelihood, the Vendakar would invade and conquer Marovingia, yet four out of five of the duchies under the rule of his master would be enough, initially.

With his master’s servants among the Wold and the Noric’s masters, the Five Duchies would fall quickly.  And I, he thought, will be free to act more openly.   Xavien had enjoyed his game of shadows, but he longed for the chance to use his powers to their full extent.  His sorcerous abilities would improve capabilities of his shock troops and he knew that cycles of study and preparation at Armak Zhul had given him enough wizardly power to crush any number of southern wizards.

“What if they unite against you?” Seraphai asked, her voice intent and her violet eyes calm.  Xavien, though, thought he caught the barest flicker of crimson in those eyes.  Was this a question from his Queen… or his Master?

“It will not happen,” Xavien said.  He had planted a letter which revealed his own ties to the Armen for Duke Hector to find.  Given that he was Grand Duke Christoffer’s son, the letter had poisoned the alliance between them.  Xavien had gloated a bit when he heard of the casualties that his father’s forces took after Hector betrayed him.

No, they would not work together.  And after his servants, Covle Darkbit and Grel, had slaughtered so many innocent people in Hector’s name, the uprising in the Duchy of Masov would not end any time soon.  Indeed, they would have the entire winter to think upon Hector’s many crimes and let their hatred fester, egged on by Covle Darkbit’s continued raids.

“My army will be ready in the spring, well before Hector’s forces will expect us,” Xavien said.  “I will shatter his army with my first strike.”  He smiled a bit, “I may even let Hector live, he has been a fine, if unwitting, servant.”

Seraphai did not match his smile, but in Xavien’s opinion, she didn’t take enough pleasure in their work.  Everything she did was calculated, drawn to a plan that only she seemed to know and understand.  “Hector must die,” she said in an intent voice.  “If you succeed in only one thing, be certain of that.”

Xavien nodded, “Of course, my Queen.  Anything else?”

“Beware your father, Xavien, he knows of you, now, he’ll not forgive you for what you’ve done,” Seraphai said the words with no emotion or emphasis, yet Xavien couldn’t help the slightest thrill of nervousness.

“I don’t plan to let him live long enough to be of concern,” Xavien said.  His father’s continued survival was a matter of irritation.  Xavien could admit to himself that his plans involving his surviving family had been overly complicated.  He should have waited to spring his ambush until his father rejoined the Northern Fleet, just as he should have cut his sister’s throat after he used her for the ritual.

“If you fail in this, it will leave the Five Duchies in a stronger position,” Seraphai said as she took her seat.  It was a clear dismissal and Xavien gave her a gracious bow and turned away.

In the corridor, Xavien paused to consider his next action.  Tarjak Rusk awaited him at his quarters, but Xavien was willing to let the Armen Warlord wait.

The bellowing roar of the wind was muffled by dozens of feed of solid rock, yet even so, the snarl of it sounded like some barely muzzled beast.  There was one other thing he could do to sow chaos over the winter.  Xavien smiled a bit at that thought and he turned his mind’s focus to a distance, to the creations of his mother’s grandfather.

Awaken, he commanded, awaken and hunt.

***

 

Fate of the Tyrant comes out on June 30th.

Fate of the Tyrant Blurb

Here’s the blurb for Fate of the Tyrant, Book III of the Eoriel Saga:

The Tyrant’s time has come.

Winter has come to the Five Duchies, a time of bitter cold when noblemen scheme and commoners wonder how to feed themselves through the long, dark months.

In the far north, the Warlord Tarjak Rusk stirs his forces, guided by the wizard Xavien, Herald to the dark spirit Andoral Elhonas.  Xavien knows that the time has come when the Five Duchies are vulnerable… and with the might of his master behind him, Xavien could conquer the civilized lands as an undisputed tyrant.

In the Duchy of Masov, Duke Hector the Usurper faces a civil war, brought on by the survival of Lady Katarina.  If he doesn’t squash this rebellion with the coming spring, he’ll face a war on two fronts.  Yet even if he wins victory, it will be a hard fought one against his own people, leaving scars that might never heal or even shattering the Duchy into splinters.

The fate of the Five Duchies might well be decided in Masov, but if Hector and Katarina cannot resolve their differences, then they’ll only be the first to fall to the raiders from the north.  Only if they can unite against him can they seal the fate of the tyrant.

You can find snippet one here.

Fate of the Tyrant Snippet One

Here’s the first snippet for Fate of the Tyrant!

Prologue

 

Commander Covle Darkbit

Near Tymbark, Duchy of Masov,

12th of Ravin, Cycle 1000 Post Sundering

 

Covle Darkbit had undergone something of a transformation over the past months of bitter cold-weather fighting.  His perfectly trimmed beard and mustache had become a ragged, unkempt thing.  His finely tailored tunic and hose had been replaced by a practical — and warm — woolen coat and heavy overcoat.  His cheeks, normally slightly plump from his love of good food and wine were gaunt, kept from the edge of starvation only through ruthless efforts to keep himself and his men fed.

The internal changes, though, would have surprised those who had not known him before he took up Lord Hector’s service.  He stared through the sparse trees with a hungry look.  Yet he remained motionless, a patience driven home by the hard fighting here in the borderlands between what Lady Katarina and Lord Hector’s armies claimed.

Covle would never have waited motionless for hours in the miserable cold and snow, not without the desperate patience earned through dozens of skirmishes in these border lands.  He had seen several of Lord Hector’s other mercenary commanders give in to eagerness or impatience… which was why only his force remained of those sent by Hector to savage the rebels.

Well, he admitted, that and the fact that I have some help.  He stroked the hilt of his sword, warm to the touch, a gift from Xavien at their last meeting.  Xavien had told him that it would draw power from those it killed and that it was an old, and valuable, weapon.

At the time, he had felt flattered by the gift and took it as a sign that Xavien did not blame him for the mess at Zeilona Gora.  Now, it was just a tool to keep him alive.

The sun came out from its hiding place in the clouds.  He squinted against the sudden glare of sunlight on snow.  What a sad, pathetic thing I have become, he thought, a thing of the cold and darkness.  Yet he felt a cruel smile part his lips as his patience was finally rewarded.

Bundled figures moved against the bright snow.  At least fifty of them, wrapped in blankets cut into jackets and laden with packs.  They had only three wagons with them, the oxen that pulled them were gaunt, as near to starvation as their owners.  Refugees from the lowlands, seeking safety and protection from Lady Katarina.  Some part of Covle Darkbit was tempted to allow them past.  More mouths would stretch things even tighter in the southern highlands.  While in the north the farmers were getting in the last of the season’s crops, frost and snow had fallen early here in the highlands.  Covle and his fellow mercenaries had burned stockpiles of food where they could.  Yet he knew that the rebels had some supply routes through the Ryft Guard.  And in spring, these starving refugees would be more hands to help get crops in… and more volunteers for Katarina’s army.

No, he thought, while I would prefer to kill rebels, I’ll leave refugees dead in the road just as gladly.  Besides, these poor fools would have their most valuable possession with them and he had already accumulated a tidy stash of loot from the others he had hit.

The thin snow of late fall slowed them as they trundled along the road.  It tugged at their wagon wheels and dragged at their feet.

“At them!” Covle snarled and his men leapt to their feet.  His handful of bowmen loosed a volley and threw aside their bows to join the charge.

A few of the refugees fell from the arrows, but most of them seemed to hunker down.  Covle felt the hairs on the back of his neck rise as he saw them withdraw to their central wagons.  Most of the refugees he had attacked had either fled or cowered, but this lot had consolidated, almost as if to form a fighting rank…

“It’s a trap!” he shouted out as he stumbled to a halt.

The laden wagons had looked heavily laden… and they were, save with fighting men instead of furniture or supplies.  At least thirty more men rose up from the wagons, many armed with bows.  They took aim and loosed as Covle’s men stumbled to a halt in shock.

Those arrows scythed into his men from close range and Covle felt his stomach sink as dozens of his men went down.  On fair terms, he would have taken any hundred of the enemy with his own company… but now the enemy had the numbers and advantage… and they had already proven the had the element of surprise.

“Fall back!” Covle shouted out.  They closed ranks as his sergeants shouted commands and began to withdraw, even as the enemy started to advance.  Covle felt his mouth go dry as he hoped, for a moment, that the rebels would charge him.  If they broke ranks to pursue him, his men could hammer them, for his men had the better armor and weapons for this fight.

Covle felt his hopes dashed, though, as a big, one-eyed man moved to the front of the rebel formation and slow their movement.  Damn, Covle thought, it would be good to salvage something of this.

The enemy volleyed more arrows towards him, but Covle’s men at their shields up, and Covle swept out his sword to dash a couple out of the air that were headed his way.  He had become used to such feats, no longer certain if his skill had improved or if the sword somehow sensed such threats and used his arm of its own volition.

In truth, Covle didn’t care.  He was still alive… and he would live another day.

He nodded at Savino, his second in command, “Orderly withdrawal, once we get back to the trees we’ll mount and head for Myrtai.  If they’ve a company here, then they’ll be thinner there.  We might take one of their patrols as payback.”

“Yes sir,” Savino said.  The former mercenary captain had signed on under Covle after the losses he took at Zielona Gora.  He hesitated though, “Their leader, do you think that was the Swordbreaker?”

Covle grimaced at that.  The rebels had a number of commanders who had garnered fear among Lord Hectors mercenaries.  Swordbreaker was one of them, purportedly the same who had killed Grel.  Covle didn’t believe that any one man could have killed Grel, the Duke’s Hound.  More than likely it would have taken dozens of men and left most of them dead in the process.

Still, Swordbreaker had a reputation and Covle could understand the importance of such things.  “Him?” Covle scoffed.  “Any man can wear an eyepatch and wave a sword.  Probably half of Katarina’s forces have someone looking like that, just to scare piss-ant cowards.”

He saw Savino nod and look a bit more confident at that.  Then again, if the rumors were right, half of his company had died when they ran into Swordbreaker’s Ghost Company.  Have to put some spine back into the men after this fight, Covle thought.  Though he had mentioned a patrol, he would probably have them burn out some more farmers to give them their confidence back.

Covle gave a last glare at the rebel formation before he turned his attention back to his men.  “Alright, move it out!”

***

You can find Snippet Two here.  Fate of the Tyrant will be available on June 30th

Kal’s June 2016 Forecast

Wait… where did May go?

The good news I guess is that I’m elbow deep in The Sacred Stars and I hope to have it out to my alpha readers soon.  The fourth book of the Shadow Space Chronicles will continue the military science fiction series as we delve a bit into the Ghornath and just what has been going on with them.  Its a step back from the massive battles of the last book, but with plenty of desperate odds, exploding space ships, treachery, romance, and everyone’s favorite pair of engineers.

I’ve got the final cover for Fate of the Tyrant, and I’ll be pushing that as well as the blurb out here soon, also starting snippets as I lead up to the release later this month.

As I said last week, I’ve been sick so I’ve fallen a bit behind on my writing schedule.  I hope to get caught up this month, which means putting lots of words to page.  My next project is an urban fantasy work, which I’ll be submitting to publishers (if that doesn’t work, I’ll self publish, but either way, it’ll be a while before it sees the light of day).

I hope to have it done by the end of the month or early July at the latest.  My next project after that is the third Renegades book.  I’ll be adopting a more standard novel format for that one, so it’ll have a more linear reading style rather than the collection of short stories and novellas like the previous two books.

That’s all for now, thanks for reading!

Quick Update

Just a quick update for now.  I’ve been extremely busy this past few days and also fighting a serious cold.  I’m sort of on the upswing, but I’m still utterly wiped out.  I’m still at work for 10 hours a day plus about an hour commute either way.  To top things off, the whole family has been sick, so things have been a bit stressful.

That said, I’ve been finalizing stuff with my cover artist for the Fate of the Tyrant.  The third book of the Eoriel Saga will be coming out sometime in June, basically as soon as I hear back from my alpha readers, get the edits done, and send it on to my beta readers for a second look.  There’s so much going on in this book that I’ve had to spend extra time on it, in order to do all the characters justice.

I’ll go more into what’s going on with my June update, but since it’s been quiet here I just wanted to pass that along.  That’s all for now, I’ll have more news and posts later.

Kal’s May 2016 Forecast

May is here!  I’m excited for a variety of reasons, not least of which is that I’ve started work on The Sacred Stars, the next book of the Shadow Space Chronicles.  This one takes a step back from the huge battles of The Shattered Empire and The Prodigal Emperor and has a smaller cast as well.  If all goes well, I’ll have it done by the end of the month, which means out to my alpha readers in June and published in early July.

In other news, Fate of the Tyrant is almost ready.  It wraps up the initial trilogy of the Eoriel Saga and paves the way for the rest of the series.  I’ll do a final round of edits and then I just need to wait to hear back from my alpha and beta readers.  Look for a blurb and snippets as well as the cover to appear over the next few weeks.

In other news, I’m finishing the final setup for a store here on the website as well as coordinating things with Sutek Press to start selling signed copies of my books there.  I’ll post more when it’s all ready to go.

Next month I start work on an urban fantasy book I’ve had knocking around in my head for a while.  It’s another book I’m going to send to publishers, so don’t expect to hear much about it right away.

Oh, yeah, and a little movie called Captain America: Civil War comes out this weekend.  I’m going to see that.  Maybe twice if it lives up to the hype.  Expect a review on Monday.

That’s all for now.  Thanks for reading!

Oh… Hugo

So, as some of you have heard, the announcement of the Hugo Award Finalists (as opposed to nominees) has come out.  And we’ve got an interesting variety there.  Everything from some good, well written stuff to, well, Space Raptor Butt Invasion.

There’s been a variety of articles written about all this.  At this point, the Hugo Awards went from quietly excluding people they didn’t like to an outright war between Puppy Haters, Sad Puppies, and Rabid Puppies.  The awkward part being the “right wing” Sad puppies are really the moderates here, seeking to nominate books based upon merit alone.  On the one end you’ve got the people who want the award to be a precious token passed between insiders and on the other you’ve got a host of angry people who are tired of politically correct, bland, crap being given awards because the authors check the right boxes within the exclusive club.

The really sad part is that the award that used to mean quite a bit became so relatively worthless that both sides are now willing to burn it to the ground to spite the other.

That, my friends, is what you get when you push things too far one side or the other.  I’m afraid the same thing is happening now in US politics, where we have a clown show up for the presidential nomination.   Not because any of these candidates will make things markedly better, but because at this point, both sides are so raveningly angry that they just want to punish “those other people.”

As of this time, I’m coining the term a “Hugo” for a clusterfuck of gratuitous proportions, made up of angry people who want to see things destroyed.  I’ll be certain to use it in my books going forward, where appropriate.  Sadly, that’ll be the only weight the award will carry going forward.

It’s a Hugo of a situation.

Review – Renegades: Out of the Cold by Kal Spriggs

A review up for Renegades: Out of the Cold over at between the bookshelves.

 

betweenthebookshelves's avatarbetweenthebookshelves

29764009Genres: science fiction
Series: Renegades #2
Synopsis for Out of the Cold: The Renegades are coming out of the cold. 
They have escaped from an alien prison, stolen a ship, survived pirate attacks, and now they are finally returning to civilization. 
Yet civilization brings all new threats. Old enemies await and new enemies abound. They’ll have to work together to survive, even as their own pasts and fortunes seek to tear them apart. Along the way, they’ll face an infamous assassin, slavers, bounty hunters, and get caught up in the biggest war that humanity has ever seen.
Because the Chxor are coming and if the Renegades won’t help stop them, who will?
Rating: Farm-Fresh_starFarm-Fresh_starFarm-Fresh_star
The author was kind enough to give me a copy of this book in exchange for a review. This does not in any way affect my review of this series.
I enjoyed this installment just as…

View original post 248 more words

Forums, Store, and Audio Snippets

Good morning everyone!   Just a heads up on some of the things I’m working on.  I’m looking into an online forum, setting up a web store where you can buy T-shirts and other stuff, and doing some other updates to my website.

Right now I’ve got a few ideas of what to put in said web store, but I’d love some feedback.  What kinds of things would you like to see? Signed books?   T-shirts?  Coffee/Tea mugs?  Anubus plush dolls?  Let me know what you’d like to see and I’ll put it up.  I hope to have it set up sometime in the next couple weeks, but I’ll be able to add and remove products depending mostly on interest.

The forum is also a work in progress, though it may take me another month or so to get started on it.  A big part of forums is participation, so I’ll be checking it regularly and hopefully those of you into such things can have some fun discussions there.

Lastly, I’m working with a very talented young woman to start doing some promotional audio snippets for my Renegades series.  Depending on interest, I may do those for some of my other books.  I’ll post links when I get the chance, but again, I’ll want some feedback from people.

Lastly, Renegades: Out of the Cold has been out for almost two weeks.  If you read and enjoyed it (or even if you didn’t like it), please post a review!  Reviews are how Amazon recommends books to readers.  I currently have zero reviews for just over a hundred sales.  Reviews help new readers to find me, so if you get the chance, please post a review!