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Albert Camus

Don't walk behind me; I may not lead. Don't walk in front of me; I may not follow. Just walk beside me and be my friend.

Sunday, January 15, 2017

he has done the unthinkable - The Unleashed (The Undelightened #2) by Bentz Deyo

“Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before.” Edgar Allen Poe

Description:

Leam Holt has done the unthinkable. He’s saved Harbing from utter destruction by consuming the toxin that was intended for the entire town and he’s rescued Eloa’s father from a prison cell under Darkness Headquarters. 

But at what cost? Stricken by the poison and unable to remember who he is or access his Light side, Leam is captured by the evil Gideon and brought in for interrogation and training. Surrounded by Darkness, Leam revels in his undiluted Dark power and connects with other violent and corrupt kids, especially the bold and gorgeous Rylan. Still, Leam tries to piece together memories about his past, including those of Eloa, who he discovers is in grave danger. 

While Sebastian and the forces of Light work to free Leam from the grasp of the poison and Gideon, the world is thrown into turmoil from exposure to the toxin. The battle for control over the prospect, the person who will lead the world into complete Darkness or Light, is heating up, and Leam’s role in the war grows murkier.

"Not unlike the first book, The UnLeashed had many plot-twists, has left me with many questions and also ended on a cliff-hanger with a severely long drop. Knowing this is only the second out of five books solidifies to me that this series still has a lot more to offer and that this is still just the start of something wonderful. I cannot wait for the next installment." -Lucy May, Goodreads

Leam Holt's eighteenth birthday tomorrow caps the most depressing year of his life, marking the anniversary of his failed delightenment—the soul-darkening, magic-bestowing rite of passage that should’ve launched him into the fight between Darkness and Light. Making things worse,Leam’s insufferable brother, Zach, the pride of the family, is set to delighten in a few short hours.

When Gideon, the evil leader of Darkness, arrives to preside over Zach’s ceremony, the course of Leam’s life takes a drastic turn. Rather than fading farther into the background, Leam is ordered to undergo a series of brutal trials. Vast magical power is suddenly within Leam’s grasp if he triumphs, but Leam can’t seem to stay away from a beautiful girl of Light, and his testing is yielding disturbing results.

As Leam begins to uncover secrets on both sides of the war, he realizes the fate of humanity is at stake, and he may have the most to lose in the fight.

EXCERPT




Chapter 1

A man shot a burst of energy from his palm. The force hit the boy square in the chest, propelling him through a stretch of woodlands until he was flung out onto paved road. The back of his neck struck asphalt first, as he skidded into the curb, the road curving down a hill out of sight. The boy could hear footsteps, many of them, scuffling up the hill. Through the haze of dizzy stars, he dragged himself to his feet and stumbled behind a nearby sidewalk garbage can. Peering through the garbage can’s metal mesh, the boy watched about fifteen figures approach. They were draped in trench coats as black as the sky had surely been an hour ago, although now, from below the horizon, the sun was lending the sky some light and a little color. “Keep your eyes peeled,” a short, dumpy man growled, glaring at the woods from which the boy had been flung. “Gideon wants this kid found.” “He wants this prospect found,” a taller man with a razor- sharp goatee said. “But Kavitch is right, everybody, the boy could be nearby.” “How do we know that?” a third man asked, big and blond. “The prospect disappeared from his home here in Harbing. Vanished into the air right in front of his brother and a girl of Light. Those two are being brought into headquarters now.” The boy huddled closer to the garbage can, hugging his knees to keep them from shaking. Could he be this “prospect” these people were talking about? Why the hell couldn’t he remember anything? His home in Harbing? A brother? A … “Girl of Light, Flint?” asked the blond man. The man with the goatee nodded. “Daughter of the goon we got locked up in the dungeons. Seems to be a family affair.” “What’s the prospect look like?” a black-h aired woman with a hoarse voice asked. “We go by his hands,” Flint said, peering at a spot near the middle of the road. “He’s got white markings on his thumbs and index fingers.” The boy went straight to his hands and his heart lurched. Identical white, thick- banded scars curved from the tips of his thumbs to the tips of his index fingers. Two things struck him at once: he was some sort of prospect wanted by people in black trench coats, and he had no memory at all, no sense of identity. He was also losing blood, which he could feel spilling down the back of his neck, running a wet warm trail between his shoulder blades. “Flin’, wha’ you lookin’ a’?” someone masked by the others asked. The boy followed Flint’s line of sight as Flint moved to the yellow lines, bent down, and put his finger to a small, shiny, dark pool. With a jolt of panic, the boy grabbed the back of his head. “Blood,” Flint said, as it dripped off his finger. The last thing the boy saw peeking through the mesh wiring was a flash of Flint’s palm before the garbage can blasted apart in an explosion of debris and metal shards. When the boy was able to blink his eyes open, he found himself completely surrounded by a circle of black trench coats. Facing him stood Flint. “Gideon’s looking for you, buddy,” Flint said, his face darkening. “Believes you’re the culprit who foiled last night’s plans.” 2 Plans? The boy thought, searching for a way out of the circle but knowing it wasn’t there. What plans? “Was it you?” Flint asked. The boy shrugged. “You don’t know?” Flint scratched his razor- sharp goatee. “What did you do last night?” The boy shook his head. “What do you know, buddy?” “Nothing.” The boy’s gaze darted around the faces he could see. No kind eyes. No smiles. Heart hammering, he forced his face calm. “Just what I’ve heard from you.” A tall black man beside Flint grinned, all gums, no teeth. “Then why aren’t you scared of us, handsome?” “Quiet!” Flint shouted, drawing his ring finger to the side of his head. His eyes widened. The boy’s extremities went numb. “Another telemast coming in, boys. Seems the prospect’s status has upgraded. Enemy to be taken in alive.” Without a breath, Flint added, “The order’s from Gideon himself.” The boy felt fear shiver through the group, as each trench- coater raised beam-s traight arms in unison, every palm faced right at him. “Take him now, boys,” Flint said, “before he vanishes, as he’s apt to do.” With a quick swirl of dark movement, a hood was stuffed over the boy’s head. Firm hands were gripped around his wrists and ankles. The boy could see nothing but black. 3

Chapter 2

Fluctuating in and out of consciousness, back and forth between full darkness and a thick grogginess where she sensed shadows of movement and blanketed light, Eloa tiredly won- dered not if she was stuck in a dream or a nightmare, but whether this reality would be dreamlike or nightmarish if the fog were to clear. “How far’d you stick the needle in, Cabus? She can barely open her eyes.” “She’ll be fine, Samara; it was a pinch.” Eloa didn’t recognize the voices. She was too sleepy, like her head was full of cotton. “To the bone?” the woman, Samara, asked with a mixture of annoyance and panic. “Our orders didn’t say induce a coma.” “She won’t slip that deep. She’ll be fully alert by …” The voice of the man, Cabus, faded as Eloa fell back into blackness, swimming there until consciousness returned and reality was again weighed down by whatever drug they had administered. She was lying flat, it was dark, and she was moving, one captor by her head and the other by her feet. There was also soft whimpering beside her. She was not the only captive. She flopped her woozy head toward the whimpering, but slipped away again. Something of a memory came to her: a shiny beige oval hovering above her, a face, a large face, with long locks of golden hair. “Dad,” Eloa muttered. “Where are you? You okay?” “What’d she say?” the voice by her head asked. Samara. Reality. Moving through the dark. “Told you it’s not a coma,” Cabus said, gloating. Eloa tried to blink in her surroundings. Was it a tunnel? Where were they? What was this? “What do you want from me?” a boy next to her screamed. “Wh- wh- what was I supposed to do?” “Now, now, Holt pup,” Cabus said, his voice grinning. “Be still.” “Leam was there! I did my job! I was roping him in and next second he was gone. How was I supposed to see that coming if no one else did?” “Take it up with Gideon, Zach,” Samara said. Zach? Eloa thought, battling the black clouds of the drugs for clarity. Zach? Zach? The thought of the name tasted bad. “No one told me he was a prospect, whatever the hell that means!” Zach shouted with desperation. “No one told me he had powers. No one told me he could disappear into thin air. And I’m better than him anyway! Can’t you see — ” “I said take it up with Gideon, you little shit,” Samara snapped. “Another word and I’ll tear your tongue out.” They have Zach, too, Eloa remembered. Zach Holt. That’s right — they got us from Holt Manor. Zach dragged me there. I remember now. And Leam … Did he get away? Leam … Leam … Blackness took her completely again, reality gone. The memory oval returned, smaller this time, paler, no golden hair. This face, also a man, was her dad’s age, her dad’s friend … “Porlo,” Eloa moaned. “Did she say … ?” Samara, even through Eloa’s haze, sounded stunned. 5 “Porlo,” Cabus said, sounding equally baffled. “I heard it too.” “Porlo,” Eloa moaned again, opening her eyes. Bursts of red torch flames above her head illuminated patches of stone wall as they moved. “How would she know Porlo, Cabus? She’s of the Light — by the look of her she might not have even purified yet.” “Don’t know. But I’m sure Gideon — ” Pain suddenly rippled through Eloa’s body. She bit back a scream, her teeth digging into her lip. “Her body’s fighting the injection — can you see it?” Cabus asked, sounding amused. “She’ll sleep hard soon, then come to. Yes, then she’ll come to.” “We’re nearly there anyway,” Samara said. “Her first. Cell A.” Through the pain, fear crippled Eloa’s mind. She could only grasp onto the horrible thought that she was now a prisoner, most likely at Darkness Headquarters, and her dad, since Leam had deserted her, she remembered now, was probably dead. “And the Holt pup?” Cabus asked Samara. “To his mother.” Eloa closed her eyes from the pockets of red fire, trying to turn off her mind. Her pain was abating, as was the little strength she had been able to muster. Soon her eyelids grew heavy, and the brightness of the flames beyond them dimmed. The world went dark, the sounds of her captors’ footsteps faded, and her last thought was that whatever was to be the horror show she’d experience here, she’d wake up to it. 6
UnLeashedthe for updates on the rest of the undelightened series, visit www.bentzdeyo.com UnLeashedthe BENTZ DEYO the unleashed: a novel Copyright © 2017 by Bentz Deyo All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of the publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the author. The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to locales, actual events or persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author. Third Floor Publishing, LLC First paperback edition: January 2017 Deyo, Bentz The Unleashed: a novel / by Bentz Deyo – 1st ed. ISBN 978-0-9911551-3-2 Cover Design Lisa Marie Pompilio Author Headshot by Elaine Zelker Photography Visit the website at www.bentzdeyo.com Printed in the United States of America For Dave, my friend, who still teaches me courage every day. “Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before.” edgar allen poe


About the author: 
Deyo is a New Jersey native who can usually be found running, writing, jotting new ideas in his million notebooks… or explaining things like “why pee is yellow” and “what is wind?” to his three year old daughter. He’s a fantasy nerd at heart and is currently writing book 3 of The Undelightened Series.



3 comments:

Linda Romer said...

The Undelightened Series sounds awesome! Looking forward to reading these books. Thank you

Edye Nicole said...

Thanks for the giveaway.

mia2009(at)comcast(dot)net

Jan Lee said...

Wow what an excerpt :) This sounds very thrilling and appealing to me :)