Description:
Breena Taljain’s idyllic days in Araboth came to a skidding halt when circumstances forced her into the dangerous hinterlands. The dire sacrifice she made to protect her comrades tainted her heart with hatred and despair. To cleanse herself she must outrun Death’s relentless pursuit and venture into the bleak unknown. With the odds stacked against her, stumbling into love when she least expects it may very well be her saving grace.
Meanwhile, succumbing to the Patriarch’s devious traps has Galbrecht Atalir questioning his motives. The folly of his recklessness has left him physical scarred and mentally traumatized. Now he must overcome more adversity as the wrath of the Sin Ministry bears down upon him. He will need more than wits and quick fists to find the truth he has sought for seven years.
Alas, every second Breena is apart from Galbrecht draws her further into strife. With her world rapidly crumbling inwards, she puts everything on the line for a last stand against the ruthless force that threatens to destroy all she holds dear…
EXCERPT:
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took a hearty sip of his steaming coffee and settled into the hard,
uncomfortable bench outside the Intensive Care Unit. Hospital shifts that
seemed to drag on for a thousand eternities made him truly appreciate the magic
of hot water and brown beans. He could not function properly without a caffeine
boost on such a hectic evening. His taste buds relished the warmth as the
potent beverage settled in his stomach. The rumbling it caused reminded him of how
little he had eaten today. His hunger surprised him. An appetite was the last
thing he expected to have after tending to so many injuries and ailments
tonight, especially those to the youth in Room 316.
Years of experience
in the hospital had taught him that the end results always remained the same.
Only the names attached to the husks of flesh that came into the depressive
rooms changed. Still, he had to be positive. Believing that he could make a
difference in someone’s life was more than part of his job. It was his outlook.
Attitudes were very contagious, though, and those of Doctor Atalir always found
a way to spoil his. His near-feral reaction when they had discussed
alternatives for the Taljain girl had been terrifying. Why he built such a
strong attachment to a girl he had never before met was beyond Rivas. He just
prayed that Galbrecht did not let his inner demons draw him into trouble or
worse.
He’s probably getting drunk again at The
Laughing Banshee.
Doctor Bardum
downed the remainder of the coffee and reopened Breena Taljain’s file. His
heart simply broke every time he scanned her intake sheet. He had never seen
anyone with her injuries maintain such a tenuous grip on life. It was not as if
she had the chance to avoid it. Fate had wronged her the day she exited the
womb of a Purgairan woman. Kill or be killed; eat or be eaten. It was simply
the way of things in the slums.
Her mother doesn’t even come to visit. She probably
doesn’t even realize the poor thing’s gone. Another Nepenthe addict, I bet.
Against his will,
Doctor Bardum slouched and let out a weary yawn. His wrinkled coat and plastic
glasses were becoming very heavy. Morning could not come soon enough. Alas,
such wishful thinking was not fooling anyone. His shift was far from over. Heavens
only knew what other complications would happen between now and then.
He scratched the
tiny, scruffy hairs growing along his cheeks. “Stick with it, Rivas,” he
convinced himself. “Don’t get lazy now.”
For
the second time that night he flipped through the report Doctor Atalir had put
in Breena’s file. The poor, blessed thing
deserved better. Her attacker’s chains had broken almost every bone in her
body and had her trapped in a coma. She would never breathe or eat properly
again, if she even survived at all. Her attacker turned her ribs and jaw into a
jigsaw puzzle of bones. Though her limbs and pelvis fared no better, it was the
fractures on her frontal and occipital bones that frightened him the most. At
any time the arteries in her head could surrender to the trauma and burst. He
knew not if it was God’s benevolent grace or cruelest torment that they were
still intact.
Are Galbrecht and I the real monsters for letting her
live? Where do we cross the line between doing our duties and being humane?
Rivas sighed. He
hated himself for the sentiment. Not more than two weeks ago he had seen
something similar happen to another child. The boy had arrived in the wee hours
of the night, as she had. It pained him that he could not remember his name.
You’re a hypocrite, the voice in his
heart of hearts reprimanded. You remember
Breena but not him? What makes her so worthy?
Doctor Bardum shook
his head to ward off his conscience. The boy had been in the ICU for less than
two hours when one of the arteries around his sphenoid burst. The hemorrhaging
that followed imposed a tragic death. More than anything, Rivas felt like a
murderer for not being able to act quickly enough. He did not think he could
bear the same fate befalling Breena. Heavens
forbid.
He had to be practical,
though. Her chance of survival was bleak. The fact that Galbrecht had already
withheld Anodyne-94 from her did not please him, either. It was the only
painkiller that let her sleep restfully. At
least make her final moments restful!
He pitied the girl,
yes, but she was not the only patient needing tending to. It was time to check
up on the others. The night would only drag on if he did not keep himself busy.
Rivas passed Room
302 about twenty minutes later and sauntered in with fingers crossed that the
patient inside was finally sleeping. The man was a glutton for conversation,
despite the puncture in his side that—
“Doctor Bardum!
Doctor Bardum!” The frantic voice of the nurse he had reprimanded earlier on
filled his ears and stopped him in his tracks. Was there no rest for the weary?
He stepped outside
the room and waited impatiently for the nurse to reach him. “Doctor Bardum,
you’ve got to come quickly, please!”
Then why did you leave and run all this way?
“What is it now?”
“It’s Room 316, the
girl—!”
Oh, heavens pity her!
“Breena T—”
“Yeah, doctor, that
one!” She stammered out each word as if it were a chore and breathed through
her mouth. Breena was on the other side of the wing. Where was the other doctor
on duty? “She needs you now. Come on!”
“Get ahold of
yourself! What’s the problem?”
“You’re wasting
time, Doctor Bardum. She’s starting to hemorrhage!”
The blood rushed
from Rivas’ face as if he had seen a ghost. Had he jinxed it? No, not her too! If the nurse is right, the
girl is as good as….
He let the thought
trail off. Her body was too fragile for surgery and could not tolerate any
other anesthetics, either.
Curse it all! I need Doctor Atalir here!
He shook his head and swore under his breath. With a flail of his arm and
unintelligible command he hurried over to the ailing girl in Room 316. Where in blazes are you, Galbrecht?
“Ghariel! Oh
Ghariel! Come out, come out, wherever you are!” Cain Valkyr purposefully
dragged out each syllable in his maniacal, singsong rant so it echoed throughout
Penance Row. He was clearly having fun taunting his enemy from the other side
of the dank catacombs. “You can run, run, run, but you’re still going to die!
Six minutes, Ghariel! Six more minutes until the hunt begins!”
Galbrecht exhaled
slowly and wiped his brow. The Cardinal was far enough away to grant him a
moment of reprieve yet still too close to shake off his dread. Crossing paths
was inevitable. Cain held the key to get out of Penance Row. At least he says so. He had to believe
that Tairo—the Patriarch of the Sin Ministry—was somewhere up ahead, too. Next
time he would be more careful.
The real challenge
would begin when the countdown ended and the Cardinal pursued him in earnest.
Galbrecht cringed
and spat on the ground. The aftereffects of Cain’s recent torture were
encumbering. He had to remember that the stolen Prodynorph-32 only numbed his
pain. It did not actually heal his injuries. Over exertion was still a very
lethal possibility.
He had to return to
the hospital before it wore off. I need a
miracle.
Galbrecht wasted
just over one minute adjusting to the murky darkness and surveying his
surroundings. Penance Row was more of a roach-infested maze of sewage than a
prison. The sconces housing weak, dying torches were few and far between. Thick
patches of scraggly lichen and fetid moss hung from the walls and the vaulted
ceiling far above. Rusted bars chiseled into the stone walls were the only hint
of captivity in the cells. Resting on the opposite side were piles of rat
droppings and forlorn skeletons shackled to stone. Galbrecht grimaced; he
pitied those whom the world had simply forgotten about. It’ll do the same to you, too, if you let it. Keep your guard up.
Narrow, rocky
straits littered with refuse lined either side of the greenish-black waterways.
Any intent of using them to hide from the Sin Ministers faded when he ran his
hand over the surface and immediately recoiled. Hot! It was a wonder he did not scald his flesh.
The revelation made
him screw up his lips. Was sensitivity a side effect of the Prodynorph-32? His
senses were becoming too acute. Even
the humidity was smothering and debilitating, enough so that he nearly shed his
shirt and coat. He needed them as a layer of armor against Cain’s vicious
claws.
Stay alert, Ghariel. You can take them. They’re just
drugged up, worthless scum. Just look out for Cain. He’s no god. He’s barely a
human.
His musing
shattered easily later when he spied an olive-drab, scaly snout emerging from
the fizzing water.
You should be thankful you’re even walking,
he chided himself. He knew exactly what it was and the meal it would make of
him if he ventured near. You won’t be if
that gets to you. Think of what you’ve been through after your girls died.
Embrace those instincts again. You know you want to. That’s why you still think
of yourself as Ghariel instead of Galbrecht. You’ll never find out why Tairo
targeted your family if you perish here.
Not for the first
time Galbrecht wondered how everything had come to this.
You could’ve let sleeping dogs lie. You chose not to.
Now deal with the consequences.
The loudening
clamor of footfalls thrust him into motion.
He crossed one of
the trash-lined channels with a running leap and immediately sought cover
behind a stack of rotten, musty crates seconds before a Sin Minister strolled
by. He was too busy marveling over a pair of stolen, steel knuckles to notice
Galbrecht. So that’s where they went.
His vulnerability was too much to ignore.
Galbrecht surmised
only one way to get his trusted weapons back.
With a deep exhalation
he darted forth and threw his hand over the Sin Minister’s mouth. The man
scarcely had a chance to realize what was happening when the doctor slammed his
boot against his Achilles’ tendon. Galbrecht grabbed his skull with the other
hand before he finished falling and violently jerked his neck leftwards.
The harsh crunch that followed instantly silenced
his wail.
Galbrecht frowned
and gently laid the body onto the ground. The nagging sense of morals he was
trying to overlook gnawed at him. He had shed too much blood in the name of justice. The fallen might have once been
someone’s brother, father, or friend.
That was then and this is now.
Galbrecht eased the
steel knuckles over his hands and dragged the body behind the crates. Ethics
blurred when his survival was at stake. Every passing second left him in
greater amazement of the person he had become.
No, more like animal. I might even blend in or fool the
bastards for a bit.
He was flexing his
hands and savoring the feel of cold metal upon his palms when he heard the
strident clang of metal scraping
against metal. The distant, maniacal bout of laughter that followed made his
spine tingle.
“Are you scared
yet, Ghariel? Have you gone mad, mad, mad with fear?” Cain let out another
maddened howl. “The excitement makes me want to cut, cut, cut you to pieces
now! I can’t take it! Two more minutes, Ghariel. Two!”
Galbrecht had not
realized how hard it was to stay calm until now. He needed to be ready. At once
he rummaged through the thug’s pockets for anything useful. All he found was a
few flint matches and two unused syringes of Nepenthe. What a waste. Only dust and air kissed his fingers when he
searched for more. He lifted—
The apocalyptic click of a crossbow trigger behind his
neck halted his search.
Beads of cold sweat
trickled down his brow. The Nepenthe fell freely onto the ground. How had he
been so careless? Again. He was at
the mercy of the Sin Ministry now.
“You weren’t much
of a challenge. Get up and put your hands where I can see them.” His fetid,
sour breath made Galbrecht want to hurl again. “I’m going to make a spectacle
out of you for the Cardinal. He’d get a real laugh out of that.” The man
prodded him twice with the blunt edge of the crossbow.
Get ready, Ghariel. He’s overconfident. You can do
this.
“I don’t know what
you did to tick off the boss but it’s pretty bad. You should be honored.” He laughed smugly and slammed the
crossbow into the back of his skull. “Don’t speak or I swear I’ll spill your
brains.”
Move on the count of three.
“The bolt’s got a
splash of the Cardinal’s tropical frog sweat on it.”
One.
“A few drops will
bring about paralysis. You should know.”
Two.
“No, I changed my
mind. Talk…now. Beg me to—”
Three.
In a single,
lightning-fast motion, Galbrecht bashed his heel into his captor’s shin and
ducked. The Sin Minister screeched and haphazardly pulled the trigger. The
poisonous bolt whizzed just over the doctor’s head before the crossbow tumbled
harmlessly out of his hands. He gasped and stammered in confusion—
That was the only
opening Galbrecht needed to grab the man and launch him over his shoulder. A
loud splash sent a spray of warm
water onto his clothes and cheeks.
He watched the Sin
Minister flail about and gasp frantically in an attempt to breathe. He was
completely oblivious to the bubbles moving ever closer as he swore boorishly
and reached for solid ground—
Then eighty
carnivorous teeth closed in upon his legs and pulled him under. A muffled cry
followed by a horrifying crunch radiated
throughout Penance Row. A successive bite consumed the Sin Minister’s torso up
to his shoulders. Within seconds only a patch of bloodied breeches and a
widening, crimson puddle remained of him.
Galbrecht did not
move until the alligator plunged back into the murky depths. The sound of it
devouring flesh, bone, and everything in between made his stomach turn. He had
not intended to deliver the man to such a grisly demise. It was exorbitant.
Cain would find the red stain he had left behind easy to follow, too. He
wracked his mind for a way to cover it up but could think of nothing.
I’m no different than they are, he
mulled over in disappointment. I’ve
stolen another life and yet I’m only thinking about saving my own skin.
That could be you if you’re not careful,
his reason warned. Get real! These
bastards aren’t going to stand still while you overcome this petty regret. The
dog threw in his lot with murderers and criminals. He deserved to die. You’ll
slay more before this night is over, too. It’s just the way of things. Kill or
be killed, Ghariel. Kill or be killed.
He clenched his
teeth together and kicked the weapon into the murky water. It would do him no
good against someone as fast and wily as Cain.
As if on cue, all
the torches rimming the walls abruptly died out. Galbrecht could not see more
than a dozen feet ahead. He realized he had not known true danger until now.
“Ghariel!” Cain’s
familiar yet distant shriek made his temples throb. At least he had some breathing room. “Your time is up,
Ghariel Lodan! You are still alive, yes? I heard that splash, splash, splash
just now. You better not be dead. If you are I swear I’ll kill you again, and
again, and again!” He chuckled and grated his claws against the iron bars six
times in succession. “Beware the fiends in the water, Ghariel. They can’t have
you. No, no, no, they cannot. You’re all mine!”
The harsh screech
struck Galbrecht like the blow of a hammer. He could feel tingling waves shoot
up his forearms. Even his eardrums felt on the verge of exploding. The
Prodynorph-32 was clearly making his senses far too keen. Not for the first
time he wondered if he would have been better off without it.
Don’t be stupid! Without it you’d be utterly crippled.
“Five nothings and
four very hungry reptiles will join me in my hunt, hunt, hunt. Have you any
last words, any dramatic confessions to make?” He let out a screeching hiss.
“You’re a surgeon, Ghariel. You’re supposed to be, be, be smart! You could’ve
figured out why, why, why the Lord Master took your family away! Look at where
your oh-so noble quest for revenge got you. Look
at it, Ghariel. Look hard!”
So, he’s not acting alone, the
doctor considered. He tried to tune out as much of the Cardinal’s gloating as
possible. Two are already down, which
leaves three. I still don’t like the odds. To say that survival is farfetched
is an understatement.
“It’s time for the
hunt to begin! Ready or not, not, not, Ghariel Lodan, here I come!”
Goodreads ** Amazon ** Barnes&Noble
Book #1
Fourteen-year-old Breena Taljain’s dreary existence in the slums of Purgaire comes to a sudden end when a chance encounter with a criminal mastermind known as the Patriarch goes horridly wrong. His assault on her for refusing to pay for her mother’s addiction leaves her comatose and teetering on the edge of life and death.
Galbrecht Atalir is a washed-up doctor struggling to overcome his inner demons through alcohol and aggression. He never quite recovered from the unsolved murder of his family seven years prior. When he discovers Breena as his newest patient, he knows at once that the Patriarch is the one who eluded him for almost a decade.
The medicine Galbrecht gives Breena draws her into a heavenly paradise. When it ebbs away, though, the recurring trauma plunges her into treacherous hinterlands. There, Breena must learn to find power in courage, hope, and love to overcome fiends of hatred bent on permanently ending her existence.
With justice burning in his heart, Galbrecht begins a race against time to seek out the Patriarch in the underworld before Breena loses her struggle against the ever-darkening terrors of her mind…
For Signed Paperback (with Bookmark) contact the author directly via Facebook or email
Jake Bonsignore is the author of Descendant of Strife, Empyreal Illusions, and Awakening the Fire. he is a graduate of the University of South Florida with magna cum laude honors. Outside of his literary pursuits, he enjoys playing sports and is a fitness enthusiast. he is currently working on his next novel, The Lioness.
4 comments:
The reviews on goodreads tell good things about this book.
Great giveaway! Thank you!
Foarte frumoasa cartea si descrierea. Si dragut din partea voastra sa organizati un asemenea concurs, cu premii superbe.
Would love to read this, sounds great! Thanks! :)
Fain concurs,thanks
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