The Young Sorceress – Chapter 10 Excerpt

Isaak Wissinger leaned over the ship’s railing and stared down into the dark blue water.  He wasn’t the only one.  Dozens of other passengers on the S.S. Waif des Vaterlands were lined up to watch as half a dozen giant turtles, each larger than a kitchen table swam along apparently oblivious to the steel vessel chugging past them.  They were large, but not nearly as amazing as the writer had expected, having heard for years legends of the monsters to be found in Mallon.

After leaving his employment with Herr Fuhrmann, Wissinger had taken the train from Butzbach to Friedaport, where he had worked on the docks until he had enough accumulated wealth to book passage, steerage class, to Mallontah.  This had taken him several months, but at last he had set sail.  Now, he had been on the ship for forty five days.  His daily meals consisted of porridge in the morning, a piece dried tack for lunch, and for supper a soup made of beans and rancid pork.  It was infinitely better that his diet in the ghetto had been.

“Herr Holdern?”

It took Wissinger a moment to remember that he was Herr Holdern.

“Yes?”

He turned to find a greasy looking little man standing behind him.  He didn’t recall seeing him before, and after a month and a half at sea, that was remarkable in and of itself.

“Do I know you?”

“I do not think so, but I know some Holderns.  Do you come from Boxstein?”

“No,” replied Wissinger.

“Do you have relatives there perhaps?”

“Not that I know of.  You know how it is.  People move all around and lose touch.  You meet someone with the same last name and they may or may not be related.  My people come from Bad Syke, but who knows?”

“What is it you did in Bad Syke?”

“Oh, I’m not from Bad Syke.  I still have cousins living there, I think.  I grew up in Wahlstedt.”

“And what did you do there then?”

“Teamster.”

“A teamster?” said the greasy fellow.  “I took you for a scholar.”

“I doubt you get calluses like this reading books,” said Wissinger, holding up his palms.  “Why, I try to stay as far away from schools and books as possible.”

“I see.”

“But it is pleasant to meet you, Mister…”

“Spinne.  Adolf Spinne.”

“A pleasure to meet you, Herr Spinne.  Maybe we can talk again before we make port.”

“Perhaps,” said Spinne with an oily smile.

Wissinger turned and made his way through the portal and down several sets of stairs to his berth.  His was one of twenty-five bunks stacked five high in the relatively small cabin.  Most of his roommates slept at night, so he tried to spend as much time as possible outside at night, instead taking in a long morning and afternoon nap.  He climbed into his bed, second from the top and pulled the sleeping curtains closed around him.  He could hear the sounds of a woman moaning in passion close by.  She was in the same room, but in one of the other bunk stacks.  This wasn’t all that unusual.  People grabbed what comfort and satisfaction they could, and there were very few places to find any real privacy on a ship as crammed as this one.

“Sweet music isn’t it?” said a husky voice near his head.

Before he could respond, the curtain surrounding him was pulled aside to reveal Zurfina’s face, framed in a shock of blond hair.  She climbed up into the bed on top of him.  There was no room to lie side by side even had that been her intention.  He was surprised though not unhappy to find that she was completely naked, and let out a deep sigh as she rubbed herself up and down his entire length.

“Missed me?”

“Yes indeed.”

She kissed him deeply, letting her tongue explore every part of his mouth.

“Have you been true to me?” she asked as she kissed his neck and reached down to unfasten his pants.

“Yes,” he said, then sighed again as she freed him from his trousers.  “Um, have you been true to me?”

She stopped and looked guiltily up at him, then shrugged.

“When you get to Birmisia, if you want, I’ll be true to you then,” she said, “for a while.”

“Oh, Lord help me, at this moment I really don’t care.”

There was almost no room for him to maneuver, so he simply lay back and let her do all the work.  It was a work for which she once again proved her skill, though she was somewhat louder than the woman who had been in the nearby bunk.  Wissinger didn’t realize it at the time, but he was none too discrete himself.  Afterwards he fell asleep with her still wrapped around him, and when he woke she gave him a repeat performance.

“The day after tomorrow you dock in Mallontah,” she said when they were done.

“That’s good.”

“Yes, but you still have a problem.”

“What’s that?” he asked.

“It’s that Spinne fellow you just spoke to.  He’s a Zaeri catcher.”

“I don’t think he suspects me.”

“But you’re not sure, are you?”  Zurfina licked his lips.  “I have to admit, I admire how good a liar you’ve become.  I wouldn’t have expected it.”

“It’s a writer’s skill,” he replied.  “What do you think I should do?”

“Just make it to Birmisia the best you can.”  She kissed him deeply.  “I have to leave and you won’t see me again until after you leave Mallontah.”

She slid off of him and out of the bed.  Wissinger pulled back the curtain to look at her one last time before she left, but she had already gone.

Books Tab

If you’ve been watching, you will have noticed that there are several page tabs at the top of this page, and I’ve been working on adding things to the site.

Under books, you can find a list of all my books.  I’ll soon have links up so that you can get someplace to purchase them in the format you want at the touch of your mouse.

I’ve been blogging almost four years, but this hosting site is less than a month old.  I plan to have it looking all posh (a word that means absolutely nothing to us Americans) by the end of the first month.

The Young Sorceress – Chapter 9 Excerpt

Hsrandtuss was startled awake when whatever he was lying on bounced.

“Girls, leave me alone.  My head hurts.”

Cautiously opening one eye, he saw that the thing he was lying on was the hard ground and it had bounced because the dragon had fallen out of the sky to land less than a score feet away from him.  He slowly rose to his feet, his tail dragging the ground as he staggered toward the little god.

“Hail mighty Yesse… nnar!” he said, stopping midway through the dragon’s name to hiccup.

The dragon waved him off, having eyes only for the young soft skin.  He spoke to her in the hoonan language.

“Sszaxxanna, blast it!  Where in name of Setemenothiss are you?”

“Here,” she called, sliding up next to him.

“What is he saying?”

The dragon had continued to talk to the sleeping priestess.

“He says ‘wake up’ and ‘time to go to hoonan city-state’.”

“You can’t leave yet,” said Hsrandtuss.  “We will have an even bigger feast for you tonight.”

The dragon’s tone changed to an urgent, beseeching sound.

“He says ‘get up, please’ and he calls her ‘favorite domestic animal’,” Sszaxxanna translated.

Hsrandtuss paused for a moment in thought.  Well, not what he expected, but it made a certain amount of sense, considering the place on the food chain of dragons and soft skins.  He stepped up beside the dragon’s massive head.

“Is there something wrong?”

The dragon’s face hovered above prone hoonan, its long forked tale running over her from head to feet.

“Yes, there is something wrong!” boomed the dragon, waking the last of the sleeping lizzies.  “I can smell something foul.”

His tongue flicked around her head again.

“There’s a sickening smell around her ear.  I think she’s been stung or bitten by something.”  His great head swung toward Hsrandtuss.  “Is there some kind of creature that attacks the ears of mammals?”

The king thought hard.  There were plenty of mammals around—small ones like opossums and weasels, but he didn’t know much about them, especially not what kind of parasites fed on them.

“It was Hkhanu!” shouted Sszaxxanna.  “He came in the night and poured poison in the youngling’s ear.  I wasn’t sure that I truly saw it, because I was half asleep, but now I remember.”

“What?” wondered the king.

“Ssu!  Come here!”  Sszaxxanna called another female over to her, a small one, only recently caught and civilized.  “You saw the witch doctor too, didn’t you?  You saw him pour poison into the poor soft skin’s ear.”

The young female nodded emphatically.

“I can’t believe it,” said Hsrandtuss.

Sszaxxanna grabbed him by the shoulders and gave him a shake.

“The guilty must be punished,” she said.

“Yes.  Yes.  The guilty must be punished.”  He raised his voice and shouted.  “Warriors, to me!  Warriors, attend your king!”

Within seconds a group more than twenty large males surrounded him.

“To the temple!  Bring everyone inside down to the fire pit!  Justice must be seen to!  Do it now!”

The warriors, bolstered by even more of their ranks who had arrived as the king was talking, moved up the path to the top of the hill, and into the great and ancient stone temple.

“What can we do?” wailed the dragon.  “Is there a medicine for her?”

“We will force the perpetrator to tell us,” said Sszaxxanna.

“Yes, of course,” said the king.  “In the meantime Sszaxxanna, get the healing women to have a look at the human and see if there is anything they can do.”

With a nod, the female left, pulling young Ssu along with her.  She returned several minutes later with two old females who began to prod and probe the soft skin’s ear.  The dragon sat back, wringing his hands like an egg keeper in cold weather.  The women were still examining their patient, when the warriors returned dragging along Hkhanu’s six acolytes and four females.  Hkhanu himself was with them too, but apparently none of the warriors was brave enough to actually lay hands upon the old witch doctor.

“You are in trouble now, Hkhanu,” said Hsrandtuss.  “You must answer for your crimes.”

“How dare you send your warriors into the temple!”  The old lizzie was so angry he was literally spitting.  “How dare you treat me like a common zsrant!”

“What did you do to her?” roared the dragon, and with a single bound, he landed amid the warriors and priests and snatched up Hkhanu in his scaly hand.  “What did you poison her with?”

For a second, old Hkhanu looked frightened, then he looked confused, but then he puffed himself up.  “You are a false god,” he said.

Something shot through the witch doctor’s chest so quickly that it was as if he had been struck by lightning.  It was the barb on the dragon’s whip-like tail.  Lifting up his tail, the body still impaled upon it, the great steel beast slashed twice with the claws of his left hand, and Hkhanu fell to the ground in a dozen pieces.

“Line them up!” called Hsrandtuss, taking a spear from a nearby warrior.  “Line up these so-called wise elders.”

The prisoners from the temple were put in a line and pushed down onto their knees.

“What did Hkhanu do to the soft skin priestess?” he asked the first acolyte.

“I don’t know anything about…”  The answer was cut short as the king drove his spear down into the captive’s chest.

He received a similar answer from the second in line, and gave him just as quick a death as the first.  The third in line, clearly seeing where this was going, started talking before the king had even come close to him.

“He did it!  Hkhanu poisoned the hoonan.  He used a secret poison.  No one knows the cure.”

Hsrandtuss turned toward the dragon.  “Great Yessennar, I place my people completely at your command.  We will do anything to help your little one.  But I do not know what that could be.”

“Take her to the human city-state,” said Sszaxxanna.  “The soft skins have powerful magic.  Maybe they can help her.”

“Yes, I’ll do that,” said the dragon, taking the girl’s limp body gingerly in his hands.  “My thanks, Mighty King.”

Hsrandtuss watched as the dragon shot into the sky faster than anything he could imagine.  Then with one wave of his wings, he zoomed northward.  Hsrandtuss truly hoped the young soft skin would recover.  He didn’t know if Hkhanu had anything to do with her mysterious illness or not.  It all worked out well though.  He would have no trouble with the temple.  He would in fact, rededicate it to Yessennar and choose a new priest, one that would cause him no trouble.  He glanced sidelong at Sszaxxanna.  She was a wily one.  She smiled back at him.  Yes, he might well have found a new matriarch.

“Come, get the other females,” he said to her.  “I need oil rubbed on my back.”

“Yes, Mighty King.”

Mighty King.  Hsrandtuss definitely liked the sound of that.

Here Comes Summer!

Nineteen days of school remaining!  Although I’ve lined up a summer school job, it is only part time, so it should leave me plenty of time to write.

I will be working on my four works in progress, and hope to finish at least three of them by the end of the year.

At the same time, I’m going to be working on new editions of my existing books.  I really feel like I need to step up my game with copy editing, book covers, etc.  I will be hiring out as much of this as I can afford in upcoming books and I hope it will pay off.

The Young Sorceress– Chapter 8 Excerpt

“I honestly don’t know what her problem was,” said Senta over her cup of tea.

“It reinforces what I’ve always said,” said Nellie Swenson.  “Magic is too dangerous.”

Graham looked from one to the other, clearly expecting Senta to get up and clock the girl reporter in the noggin, but she just smiled and nodded.

“Another bottle of Billingbow’s!” he called to the passing waitress, who happened to be his sister.

“You know where it is!” she shouted back at him.  “Go get it yourself!”

“Does anyone else want anything?” he asked the two girls seated with him.  They both shook their heads.

“Alright then, um, I’ll just be right back.”

“So how are you finding Birmisia?” asked Senta when he had left.

“Knock off the chit-chat, you lunatic,” replied the redhead.  “You’re a menace and I intend to tell all of Brechalon about it.”

“So who’s stopping you,” replied the sorceress.  “Do whatever you want.”

“Oh, I will.  And before I’m done, I’ll have freed Graham Dokkins from whatever magic you’ve used to cloud over his mind.”

Senta snorted into her cup.

“You’re a daft cow,” she said.

Graham returned with his bottle of soda, but before he could sit down, Nellie jumped to her feet.

“Come on, Graham.  I want to feed the dinosaurs.”

The boy looked questioningly at Senta.

“Go ahead,” she answered his unasked question.  “Run along and play.”

She sat alone for a few minutes finishing her tea, and had just decided to head home, when the chair opposite hers slid back and Hertzal plopped down into it.  He gave her a look, with one brow cocked.

“What?” she asked.  “Do you think I’ve ensorcelled him too?”

He shook his head.

Gaylene stopped at the table.

“Having tea then, Hertzal?”

He nodded and made a circle with his hands.

“Soup coming up,” said Gaylene, and then hurried away.

“Aren’t you supposed to be working?” asked Senta.

Hertzal shook his head again.

“So what are you doing?”

He shrugged.

“You need a girlfriend, that’s what,” said Senta.  “Maybe we can find you a little ginger tramp too.”

The Next Big Epic

While I’ll be working on my shorter works this summer, (Eagethorpe Buxton, Kanana: The Jungle Girl, Astrid Maxxim, and His Robot Wife) I’m already plotting out my next big epic.

I can’t go into too much detail at the moment, but it will probably be a seven book series, science fiction, set in space and on an alien planet, and will be in the future.

I want to tell a big sweeping story,which was my idea when I started Senta and the Steel Dragon.  I think I’ve learned a lot writing that series.  Hopefully I can apply that knowledge and experience here.

The Drache Girl – The Dechantagne House

In addition to Iolanthe and Yuah, several others live in the Dechantagne household (not including the servants).

Mrs. Colbshallow continues to live with the Dechantagnes.  Mrs. C is perhaps the most often encountered household memeber.  She has her bit in all six of the books.  By this point, she’s pretty much running the house and her son lives right across the street.

Iolana, Iolanthe’s daughter is a toddler in this book and while she appears, she doesn’t have too big a part to play.  The same is true of Yuah’s son Augie, who is a tiny baby.  Both have a much bigger parts in books 4 & 5.

At that moment a little girl, almost three, in a bright floral dress ran into the room.  Her blond hair seemed thin around her chubby, round face, but was supplemented with a large red bow on the top of her head.  Bouncing along on her chubby little legs, she was not quite in control of her body, and bumped right into the stuffed arm of Iolanthe’s chair.  She was up again quickly, though she left the item she had been carrying, a doll with a dress exactly like hers, lying on the hardwood floor.

“Auntie Yuah,” said the toddler, running to the woman with the baby.  “I want to give Augie a kiss.”

“Alright, but carefully.  He’s asleep and we don’t want to wake him.”

With the exaggerated movements that are so endearing in the very tiniest human beings, the little girl reached up on her tip-toes and puckered up her lips, stretching them out as far as they could go, and kissed the baby, held out by its mother, with a smacking sound.  She then rolled back on her heels, almost losing her balance and falling back onto the coffee table.

“Very sweet,” said Yuah.  “Now go see Mummy.”

“Don’t you dare jump on me,” said Iolanthe, as the child trundled around the table toward her.  “Your dress is filthy.  What have you been doing?”

“Making mud pies.”

“Making mud pies,” muttered the governor.  “Sirrek!”

The mottled yellow and brown lizardman returned.

“Who is supposed to be watching Iolana?”

“Kheesie,” hissed Sirrek.

“Remind her that the child is supposed to stay clean.  If she can’t do her job, I’m sure that there are others who can.  And have her draw Iolana a bath.”  Iolanthe turned to Yuah.  “If there is one thing you can count on the lizards to get right, it’s bathing.”

Yuah gave a half nod-half shrug of acknowledgement; though the vast majority of her attention was still on the sweet, perfect, angelic, little face of Augustus Marek Virgil Dechantagne.  At two months old, he was still so tiny and so helpless that without trying, he activated that part of her that seemed to want to do everything for him and to give him everything.  And he looked so much like his father.  She held and cuddled him for half an hour, scarcely noticing that everyone else eventually left the room.  Finally she was rewarded with his dark blue eyes opening.  As he looked back at her, she felt the pull of her milk, and carried the baby upstairs and into the nursery to feed him.

The Young Sorceress – Chapter 7 Excerpt

“I don’t like sitting here with them staring at me like that,” said Senta, as she brushed her hand through her hair, blond once again.

She was perched on a large rock twenty feet from Bessemer, who was stripping great pieces of flesh from the body of an adolescent paralititan.  Fifty feet from them, two large tyrannosaurs watched, their ugly black heads bobbing up and down as they shifted from one foot to the other.

“Piss off, you!” Bessemer shouted at them.  “This is my lunch!”

“I don’t think that’s going to do it,” said Senta.

The steel dragon turned toward the two monsters and roared, a massive gout of flame shooting more than half the distance toward them.  The dinosaurs roared back, but then turned and stalked off across the great field toward the herd of triceratops in the distance.

“I guess you showed them,” said Senta.

“It’s not the size of the dragon in the fight.  It’s the size of the fight in the dragon.”

The young sorceress thought that his philosophy must be correct, as either one of the black and red predators was easily twice as big as the dragon.  Then again, maybe it was the fire.

“You’re not frightened of them?”

“I used to be.  I suppose if one actually got a hold of me, I’d be in for it.  That’s not going to happen though.  And when I get a little bigger, there’ll be no creature on this entire continent for me to fear.”

“There’s always the other one—Hissussisthiss.”

“Yes, there’s always him,” said Bessemer.  “I wonder about him sometimes.  He must be lonely with no other dragons around.”

“Are you?  Lonely, I mean, with no other dragons around?”

“I’ve got you, don’t I?”  He took another big bite of dinosaur meat and chewed it.  “Someday I think I’ll meet other dragons.  There are bound to be some around somewhere.  Humans can’t have wiped them all out.”

“What makes you think it was humans?”

“You know it was,” he said.  “You lot are always wiping out other creatures.  Look at the stories.  Rendrik of the North, and those other barbarians—they were out slaying dragons all the time.”

“I suppose,” said the girl.

“Maybe they are all gone.  Maybe humans did kill them all off.  Maybe it is just me and that great green brute.”

Senta just shrugged.  She didn’t have any answers for herself; certainly none for the dragon.

Update – Eaglethorpe Buxton

I am more than halfway through the first of three new stories for Eaglethorpe Buxton– Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Queen of Aerithraine.  If you have read the two previous EB stories, then you know that the Queen of Aerithraine is an important element in the stories and consequently this story marks an important point in Eaglethorpe’s life.

I’ll probably finish this one story before I go back to Kanana the Jungle Girl.  I plan on finishing both stories, along with Astrid Maxxim 2 before the summer is done though.

The Young Sorceress – Chapter 6 Excerpt

As the warmth of the sun woke him to his fifth day on the island, Baxter felt a new sense of vigor.  He had worked hard the past two days.  A dozen hammers, twenty boxes of nails, four hatchets, two axes, twenty coils of braided rope, and the remains of an empty wooden crate seemed meager enough possessions, but it still took him an entire day to tote them piece by piece to the clearing.  He had worked hard that day and had eaten very little, though thankfully he now had a plentiful fresh water supply.

The next day he had spent finding food.  Eating the slimy remains of small crabs had sustained him during his first two days, but they were less than appetizing when eaten raw.  Scouring the jungle had provided a great pile of coconuts and several different varieties of bright purple fruit.  Some were tastier than others, but they all seemed edible.  During the day he spied several species of large birds, all of which seemed unable to fly.  He tried chasing two of them, but they were swifter through the jungle undergrowth than he was.  He did however discover one of their nests, and within it two speckled eggs larger than his fist.  He ate both of them raw, but determined to make a pot of some kind so that in the future he could boil or fry them.

The little lake in the middle of the jungle, perhaps one hundred yards long and almost as wide, was so clear that it was difficult to judge just how deep it was.  Swimming within the crystal water were numerous fish and a few large turtles.  It had formed in some kind of crater, probably volcanic, though the cool water indicated that there was no thermal activity below it at the time.  There was a lip that ran around the edge, several feet above the water that would make it impossible to climb out of, with only a single exception.  At the end closest to the ancient ruins, a set of stairs carved into the rock, descended down into the water.

The ruins were obviously man-made and resembled the remaining parts of old world Sumir, especially Donnata, rather than the reptilian constructions of Birmisia.  A forty by sixty foot platform was raised some ten feet above the forest floor, reached on all sides by a dozen stone steps.  Upon this platform were six thirty foot tall pillars and the bases and broken pieces of forty two more.  There were also hundreds of pieces of broken stone that must have once come from a roof.  Huge vines and tree roots were growing across the base and up the pillars, partially obscuring it.  There was no mistaking that it was once a temple.  The broken stonework was uniform enough, that Baxter reasoned it could be pieced together to form at least the walls of a shelter, though it would be a great deal of work.

Getting up from his sleeping place on the temple platform, he descended the stairs to the ground and then stepped down into the cool waters of the pool.  Washing himself and his clothes without taking them off, he was in the water long enough that he started shivering.  Climbing back out, he found a warm sunny spot in which to rest as he dried off.  He wanted to explore the rest of the island, or at least the part of it on which he found himself.  There had once been people here.  Perhaps there still were.  Primitives no doubt, but were they friendly or not?  Before he could embark upon that task however, he had to set up enough food for at least a couple of days.

Baxter started by collecting more coconuts and more of the fruits that he found most tasty.  The large and plentiful fish in the lake captivated him.  But how to catch them?  He had rope and toyed with the idea of somehow making a net, but set the idea aside as too time consuming.  He could make a spear though.  Almost all of the shoreline was easily accessible and he could launch spears from above the water.  Cutting down a sapling tree, he trimmed it and then sharpened its tip using his hatchet.  Using it to spear a fish was more difficult than making it.  He followed the schools of fish along from the lip of the lake and threw his spear again and again.  He didn’t hit anything and on the fifth throw, the spear drifted away from the edge of the water and he was unable to get it.  He quickly went back to work crafting another spear.

Rather than risking his second spear, Baxter determined to find an easier spot to fish.  He started through the jungle in the opposite direction from where he had found the lake, following a similar but different small stream through the forest.  Several hundred feet from the lake, the stream widened to eight or ten feet and became less than four inches deep.  Here Baxter found not fish, but crustaceans.  Crawfish with red shells that were nearly as big as most lobsters, swam through the shallow waters.  There were also fresh water mussels, but he left them until he had a pot to boil them in.  The crawfish retreated to holes in the bank, but when he stuck his hand in one of the holes, the little beast clamped onto his finger and he was able to pull it right out.

It took him almost an hour to start a fire, but once he did Baxter was able to cook his crawfish in the coals.  That night he feasted for the first time since his arrival, reveling in the taste of fresh fruit, crawfish, and toasted coconut.

Then next day, he put aside more food than he could consume in a day, and even managed to spear two fish.  He also recovered the lost spear which had floated to the southern edge of the lake.  On the day after that, his seventh on the island, using his shirt as a satchel to carry his food supplies, he started off in the direction of the crawfish shallows, but determined to explore as much of the island as possible.  He had a hatchet tucked into his belt and carried an axe in hand.