Princess of Amathar – The Kartags

Princess of AmatharThe Kartags are rat-like creatures that live in the dark places of the world of Ecos. They are sentient and live in tribal groups. I have to admit to a certain prejudice when I created Ecos. The creatures that resemble rats, spiders, snakes, etc. are inevitably evil, while those that resemble cute birds and cuddly teddy bears are good.

“This is a band of Kartags,” said Norar Remontar, turning on his small flashlight and pointing it at several prone figures. “They burst out of a hidden door while I was in the chamber alone, and knocked me out with a well placed blow to the head. I was lucky to regain consciousness before they were able to do whatever it was that they were planning to do to me.”

I looked at the beings lying dead in the circle of artificial illumination on the floor. They would have been about five feet tall when standing and they reminded me of a large rat, at least as far as their faces were concerned. They had legs designed for upright locomotion, and two sets of arms on their upper torso. Their dirty, wrinkled skin was a dull grey color, and hairless, reminding me quite a bit of the way rodents look just after they are born. Though they wore no type of clothing, they did wear simple leather harnesses upon which they carried crude hand-made stone tools.

“The Kartags are well-known to my people,” said my Amatharian friend. “They live by scavenging from more civilized beings.”

“I kind of got that impression from looking at them,” I replied. “It is lucky that you were able to rescue yourself. If it hadn’t been for the soul in your sword, Malagor and I would never have found you.”

“It may have been lucky for us that they attacked me. This subterranean passage may be a considerable short cut home to Amathar.”

The name Kartags is another made up word.

Princess of Amathar – Chapter 19 Excerpt

Princess of Amathar“Look over there,” said Tular Maximinos, suddenly at my shoulder. It was his company who had come to our aid.

I turned to see one of the black Zoasian battleships explode into a huge fireball and fall into the city below, setting off even more explosions. The battle seemed to be going well, and I could see three other enemy ships burning in the sky, as they spun out of control. All of the ships in our squadron were still in the air, though many had taken quite a bit of damage. I imagined that the squadron making the direct assault against the city was incurring even greater losses, but we had our reserves, and we knew what we were after.

Suddenly all the soldiers on deck were knocked from their feet, myself included. I jumped up to see another Zoasian ship grinding along our bow. The two ships had collided in mid-air, and the enemy was sliding down our side. As the black battleship moved closer to where we stood, it began to move away.

“Come on,” I shouted to my men, and taking a running leap into the air, I crossed the distance to the reptiles’ airship. This wasn’t really part of a plan. It just seemed like a good idea at the time to take the battle to the enemy.

Landing on the deck with a thud, I turned around to see how many of my company had made it across with me. About thirty others, including Tular Maximinos, had made it. One young warrior had not been able to make the jump, and was still falling the several thousand feet to the ground below. The remainder of our small battalion had remained behind, being unable to cross the distance before the two ships had moved too far away from each other.

“Where now?” I called to Tular Maximinos, as there seemed to be no Zoasians on deck.

“To the engine room!” he called back, and the two of us rushed toward the back of the ship, followed by thirty or so men and women.

A wide path ran along the side of the vessel between the superstructure and the edge, giving us a metal avenue down the length of the ship. It was good that it was a broad space too, because there was no rail along the side, as there was on Amatharian ships. We had gone down about half the length of the mile long vessel when I heard weapons fire behind me. I turned to see over a hundred Zoasians at the bow of the vessel, where we had just been. They were firing at us, and had already shot two of our team.

I sheathed my sword, and whipped out my light pistol. The Amatharians with me did the same, and we soon had the hulking reptiles diving for cover.

“Swordsman,” I called to a female Amatharian, “take five warriors and hold this position.”

“Yes, knight.”

I could see in her face that this young woman knew that she had just been ordered to give her life, but I could also see the fierce determination to complete her orders, and a strong desire to sell her life as dearly as she could.

Tular Maximinos and I led the other soldiers onward. At last we reached the rear of the superstructure, but there seemed to be no opening.

“We need to find a way inside.” said the Amatharian knight.

“Well then,” I said, putting away my pistol, and whipping out my long sword. “Let’s go inside.”

The blade of my sword began to glow even before my arm started its movement. I swung down to the deck, slicing with my sword, through the metal, like a butcher knife cutting through a soap bubble. With four clean strokes, I cut a large square hole in the deck. Tular Maximinos kicked the newly made door with the heal of his boot, and sent the square of metal flying downward. I whipped out my pistol and jumped into the new hole, landing some ten feet below and rolling to one side. A moment later, Tular Maximinos and the warriors of Amathar were beside me.

We were in a long hallway which seemingly stretched the length of the ship. It was brightly lit with artificial light. There were no Zoasians in sight. With a wave of his hand, Tular Maximinos signaled us to follow him, and we moved silently down the hallway toward the stern of the vessel. At each intersection of the hallway we glanced down the perpendicular shafts, expecting at any moment to be confronted by a large group of heavily armed lizard men. We ran across only one unfortunate Zoasian, whom Tular Maximinos sliced into three separate pieces.

After running literally more than a quarter mile down the hallway, we found ourselves at its end. The hallway opened up to a balcony overlooking a huge room full of machinery a hundred feet below. On the floor far below us, was the apparatus responsible for keeping the ship aloft. It looked something like a great turbine, though its hum was below the sound level of our own voices.

Almost immediately, we were spied by one of the enemy crew members on the floor, and seconds later we were engaged in a firefight with a dozen Zoasians below. Seconds later, two of my companions fell, wounds in their backs, and I turned to see a whole army of reptiles running toward us from the hallway we had just exited. I knew that the brave soldiers we had left behind had been overcome. I called out a warning to the others and fired several shots down the hall. But we were caught in a crossfire. A narrow catwalk led to the right or left of the balcony, but with weapons fire from below, and an enemy approaching from behind, it was suicide to attempt it.

“Good luck to you, my friend,” said Tular Maximinos, smiling. He then jumped to the top of the balcony railing, and holding his sword straight out, jumped down toward the machinery below.

As Tular Maximinos fell, he carved his blade into the great machine. The mechanism began to sputter and spark and shriek loudly. The Amatharian’s body continued to fall though, and hit the floor with a horrid crunching sound. I looked down to see him lying on the deck below, his legs a twisted mess of blood and bone. Before I could raise my own weapon in his defense, a nearby Zoasian pointed his ray pistol at the knight’s head and shot him.

Like a streak of lightning, a blazing light bust forth from Tular Maximinos’s sword. It danced around the room for a moment, and then blasted through the bodies of every Zoasian in the engine room. Finally it disappeared. Before my eyes had readjusted to the normal light levels, a huge fireball engulfed the room, as the massive machinery that the Amatharian had damaged, exploded.

“Come on!” I called to the brave men and women with me.

Princess of Amathar – Chapter 18 Excerpt

Princess of AmatharIn many ways, life aboard the great Amatharian battle cruiser was much easier for me than it had been in the city. The ship operated on a fixed schedule based on its own version of the city-cycle, which was recalibrated each time the ship docked in Amathar. Each person on board was assigned a duty and worked three cycles, followed by six cycles off duty. I knew absolutely nothing about the ship or its procedures, so initially I was assigned to the security detail. Since I was a knight, I was given what was essentially an officer’s rank– command of ten swordsmen, each of whom commanded eight to ten warriors.

Amatharian ships didn’t have names, though they did sport numbers. The battle cruisers were essentially all of the same class, though they had minor differences, and some were newer than others. Their importance was based entirely upon who commanded them, and what mission they were on. This ship was Sun Battle cruiser 11, and it was the flagship of Norar Remontar’s twelve ship squadron, one of four squadrons making the assault on Zonamis. Like the other ships, this one was painted navy blue with silver trim. Like the other three flagships of the fleet, this one had a great crest across the bow– in this case, a flaming sun with outstretched wings. And like all Amatharian ships, this one was arrayed with the banners of her knights. When I first saw my own banner, with a flaming sun embossed by the letter “A”, flying among the many others, I was filled with pride. There were more than ten thousand soldiers aboard this one ship, and about one in a hundred were knights.

The accommodations on the vessel were far more spacious than I had expected. Every soldier aboard had his own cabin, and though they were very small in comparison to their homes in Amathar, they were far larger than I had seen on any ocean going vessels of Earth. Each was large enough to have a bunk, which was mounted to the wall rather than sunk into the floor as was the Amatharian fashion, a small table and two chairs and a closet. My own cabin had a large window looking out toward the landscape that rolled continuously past.

Now that we were finally on our way, I spent more and more time thinking of the woman I knew I was in love with, though I had seen her only one time– the Princess of Amathar. Sometimes these thoughts would lead to remembrances of her cousin, Vena Remontar, and the friendship she had shown me. Other times I just fretted over what might have happened to Noriandara Remontar since her abduction by the Zoasians. Even cruising at full speed, it would be a long time before we reached Zonamis, and I worried about all the things which she still might face. I figured our maximum speed to be between two and three hundred miles per hour, and so even accepting the more generous of the two figures, it would be the equivalent of four and a half months before the fleet arrived. It was a long time.

I tried to make good use of all the time I had available. I learned to pilot the Amatharian aircraft, both fighters and shuttles. It wasn’t as difficult as one might expect. I imagine that any child capable of playing those fast action video games could easily manage it. The controls consisted of a joystick in the left hand to control the steering and a lever for the right hand which controlled lift. There was an automated training simulator on board which I used at first, but after it became apparent to me and to the pilots that I would probably not crash the vehicle, I was allowed to participate in some of the flight drills which were constantly leaving the battle cruiser and returning.

I improved upon my growing skill with the sword, which was in fact my primary duty aboard ship. As the leader of a security team, I did little but see to the watches around the vessel, and drill my troops with the sword and the light rifle. I must say that I had never seen men and women so devoted to duty as those one hundred or so Amatharians under my command. In that entire time, never once was a soldier absent from his duty because of sickness or anything else.

Even with all of the military activity in which I was involved, there was plenty of time for recreation and social activity. The swordsmen and warriors of my company enjoyed playing a kind of catch, in which they used an irregular shaped cloth bag filled with plastic-like beads. Another game involved the skewering of various thrown objects upon a stick as the individual ran through a maze of obstacles. I gathered that this traditional activity once involved the use of swords, but now it was considered a great dishonor to endanger one’s sword for a mere game. In addition, I spent a large amount of time in the ship’s prodigious library where I read biographies of interesting Amatharians, novels of several different types, and a book of rather dark and morbid poems penned by Mindana Remontar herself.

I was lucky to have my friends present on the same ship. Norar Remontar was of course in command, and though he was busy with his duties far more than I was with mine, we still had time to discuss life, love, and duty over dinner. Malagor occupied the cabin right next door to me. He had been given command of eight warriors, and had been placed in charge of one of the ship’s great light guns. Vena Remontar was aboard this ship as well, in command of all the squadrons of fighter aircraft. She seemed more and more beautiful each time I saw her. Tular Maximinos was there too.

A Plague of Wizards – Preorder at Kobo Books

A Plague of WizardsIn this, book 8 of Senta and the Steel Dragon: Senta Bly, the most powerful sorceress in the world has disappeared and no one knows where or why. What happens to Port Dechantagne and Birmisia without her protection for four years? Wizards with all sorts of their own agendas descend on the colony, and the citizens must cope the best they can. Nineteen-year-old Iolana Staff lives the life of a famous author, far away in the capital city, but how does her friend Esther, the only Birmisian lizzie on the continent deal with human society? Meanwhile Iolana’s cousin Terra has made the journey to the lizzie city of Yessonarah, to learn what living in the palace of a reptilian king is really like.

A Plague of Wizards is available for preorder at Kobo Books for $2.99. It becomes available on October 28!

Amathar – The Pell

Princess of AmatharThe Pell are spider-like creatures who live in a colony in the forests of Ecos. They range in size from a large tarantula to larger than a pony, the speak, and they eat any creatures they come across– including Amatharians.

Horrible alien monsters are of course a staple of pulp adventure tales and that is what I was going for in Amathar. The Pell make a brief but hopefully memorable appearance early in Princess of Amathar.

Smashwords Alerts Notifies Readers of New Releases from Favorite Authors

Smashwords Alerts Notifies Readers of New Releases from Favorite Authors
Posted: 24 Aug 2016 12:37 PM PDT

Smashwords today announced Smashwords Alerts, a new feature that automatically notifies readers of new releases from their favorite authors.

Readers who previously “favorited” authors at Smashwords will receive notifications of new releases starting tomorrow.

To track an author, readers simply visit any author profile page at Smashwords and click the button labeled, “Subscribe to Author Alerts.” When the author releases a new book, readers will receive an alert.

The page for Wesley Allison is: https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/amathar

Readers are in full control of their subscriptions. From the Smashwords Alerts Subscription Management page (found under Account: Communications Preferences or linked to from any author profile page), readers can manage the frequency of alerts (daily, weekly, monthly) or remove alerts.

If a book is on preorder, readers will receive the alert the day the book goes onsale.

Per our strict email privacy rules, the reader’s email address remains private and is not shared with anyone.

Thousands of readers browse the Smashwords Store each day searching for their next great read.

Readers appreciate that all 400,000+ Smashwords ebooks are DRM-free and most are multi-format. Readers and authors alike appreciate that the Smashwords Store pays indie ebook authors industry-leading royalty rates – up to 80% list – which puts more money into the pockets of hard-working authors and small independent presses.

 

Reading Reviews

A Great Deal of PatienceI alway say I never read reviews and I try to never read reviews.  But then I go and read reviews.  Most of my books don’t have many reviews, because most of my books don’t sell that many copies.  The robot books do, of course.  So today, I did what I said I never do and read some of the reviews of His Robot Girlfriend: Charity.  Pretty good overall, which is good, because I don’t want to feel like killing myself.  Anyway, it does motivate me to get His Robot Wife: A Great Deal of Patience done.

Senta and the Steel Dragon – Chapter Titles

With A Plague of Wizards out soon, I’m posting the chapter titles along with those of the earlier books in the series.  You can probably spot some familiar themes.

Senta and the Steel Dragon Chapter Titles

Brechalon

  1. The Greatest City in the World
  2. Distant Places
  3. Life in the City of Brech
  4. Memories
  5. Putting Plans in Motion
  6. Blood
  7. Victories
  8. Day One Thousand Nine Hundred Eighty-Four
  9. One Month Later

The Voyage of the Minotaur

  1. The Woman in the White Pin-Striped Dress
  2. At the Great Church of the Holy Savior
  3. The Head Butler
  4. The Sorceress
  5. The Steel Dragon
  6. The Minotaur Sails
  7. Augie’s Dirty Laundry
  8. Terrence’s Jungle Adventure
  9. Maalik Murty
  10. Yuah and Pantagria
  11. The Dance
  12. An Angry Angel
  13. Birmisia
  14. Founding the Colony
  15. The Result Mechanism
  16. Terrence’s Women
  17. The Refugees from Freedonia
  18. Zeah’s Proposal
  19. The Battle of Suusthek
  20. The Assault on the Town
  21. The Rescue
  22. The Wizard
  23. What Happened by the Stream

The Dark and Forbidding Land

  1. Winter
  2. The Lizzie
  3. Marriage
  4. Private Eamon Shrubb
  5. Spells and Potions
  6. Yuah and Cissy
  7. Powerful Magic
  8. Saba the Spy
  9. The Ruin
  10. The Drache Girl
  11. The Book
  12. Iguanodon Heath
  13. What Happened on the Third
  14. The Day of Daggers
  15. The Tea Party and After

The Drache Girl

  1. Senta and Bessemer
  2. On the Dechantagne Family Estate
  3. Staff
  4. A New Dress and a New Hairstyle
  5. Police Constable Colbshallow
  6. M&S Coal Company Ltd.
  7. Graham and the Constables
  8. The Return
  9. Life Among the Dechantagnes
  10. A Constable’s Duty
  11. Crime and Punishment
  12. A More Complicated Life
  13. In Search of Coal
  14. Yuah’s Trials
  15. The Glamours
  16. The Traitor
  17. Yuah and Honor
  18. The Paramour Chamber
  19. Senta and Graham
  20. What Happened That Morning Just Before Seven
  21. Revelations

The Young Sorceress

  1. Spring
  2. The Blond Girl
  3. Nellie Swenson
  4. Birthday
  5. Birthday Part Two
  6. The Real Senta
  7. Predators
  8. Gods
  9. Sorceresses and Witch Doctors
  10. The Two Sentas
  11. Pirates and Princesses
  12. The End
  13. Mallontah and Hell
  14. All Your Fault

The Two Dragons

  1. The Social Event of the Season
  2. Zurfina’s Past
  3. Mayor Korlann
  4. Cousins
  5. The Problems at Home
  6. The Long Way to Tsahloose
  7. Beneath Ancient Stones
  8. Police Inspector Colbshallow
  9. City of the Dragon God
  10. Tsahloose
  11. War
  12. Troubled Times
  13. The Green Dragon
  14. Father and Grandfather
  15. Their Future Together
  16. Sabotage and Murder
  17. What She Thought was the Case
  18. Panic and Despair
  19. The War Comes to Birmisia
  20. What Happened at Iguanodon Heath
  21. Return to Brechalon

The Sorceress and her Lovers

  1. Bangdorf
  2. The God of the Sky
  3. Iolana
  4. The Bomb
  5. Peter
  6. The Creature Beneath the Fortress
  7. A Friendly Word
  8. An Adventure
  9. The Champion
  10. Angel and Demon
  11. Yessonarah
  12. The Hunt
  13. Zoantheria
  14. The King
  15. Chief Inspector Saba Colbshallow
  16. Friends and Relatives
  17. Tea
  18. The Machine
  19. Siefer Caldell
  20. Power
  21. Life in Birmisia Colony

The Price of Magic

  1. A New Year
  2. The Famous Writer
  3. The High Priestess
  4. Wizard Peter Bassington
  5. The Sorceress’s Family
  6. Child of the Sunrise
  7. A Meeting of Kings
  8. Of Opossums and Toast
  9. Dragon Fortress
  10. St. Ulixes
  11. Coup
  12. Something Special
  13. Bikindi
  14. The Yellow King
  15. The Crawler
  16. The Mystery of Wizard Bell
  17. Pest of the Sunrise
  18. Fallen Angel
  19. Tokkenoht and Suwasuwasu Zrant
  20. The Fall
  21. The King and I
  22. What Happened Later

A Plague of Wizards

  1. Vesterdein
  2. Lady Terra
  3. Allium
  4. Bryony
  5. The Calliope
  6. Alone Among the Lizzies
  7. Stands Up Tall With A King
  8. The Baxters and the Colbshallows
  9. The Prince
  10. Pestilence
  11. The Doll
  12. The Trial
  13. The Drache
  14. The Sorceress Returns
  15. The Battle of Dhu-oooastu
  16. Engagements
  17. Humanity
  18. What Happened in Yessonarah
  19. Appertaining to Magic
  20. Leaving and Arriving

 

Astrid Maxxim and the Boardroom

Next Up: Astrid Maxxim and her Amazing HoverbikeThe Following is a bit I may or may not use in the next Astrid Maxxim Book.  In any case, I’m not getting started on it until I finish the next robot book, so I thought I would post it here.

A large chart on the boardroom wall compared Maxxim Enterprises’ competitors in space. It displayed each company name as a three letter code, it’s current plans and goals, and then compared how many launches each had made and thus far. It read as follows:

 

BOE ISS Transport/Satellite 0
BLH Suborbital Tourism 0
SRN ISS Transport Orbital Tourism 0
SPX ISS Transport/Satellite Exploration of Mars 8
VGL Suborbital Tourism 0
MAXXIM ISS Transport/Satellite Orbital Tourism 15

“It’s pretty clear who our real competition is,” said Roy Dillanson.

“Yes, it’s pretty clear,” agreed Carl Maxxim. “It’s not a surprise to me, since our friendly competitor here is also CEO of our biggest completion in the electric car industry.”

“Still, we’re way ahead,” said former US Senator Charles Bentlemore. “We’ve had almost twice as many launches and we have a waiting list of nearly ten thousand. That’s pretty impressive since we’re charging twelve times as much as our friends planning the suborbital flights.”

“Yes, but our space planes are too expensive,” Dillanson pointed out. “To recoup the cost, we’d have to fly each one nearly five hundred times.”

“That’s because they were not designed to fly rich people around the world,” said sixteen-year-old inventor Astrid Maxxim. “We should leave that to those that want to fly tourism. The space planes are for more.”

“We’ve had this discussion before,” said Bentlemore. “What you’re proposing isn’t realistic.”

“Look, it’s simple,” said Astrid. “Werner von Braun spelled it out in the fifties. First you need a cheap and efficient launch system. Our space planes are expensive to build but cheap to fly. Second, you need a space station, as a destination and a launch point. Third, you need a space dock, where you can build the vehicles and tools you need to explore the solar system.”

“You forget, my dear,” said the former senator. “The purpose of this company is not to explore and discover. The purpose is to make money.”

“Astrid hasn’t forgotten anything,” barked design chief Dennis Brown.

“Maybe I should have said ‘explore and utilize’,” said Astrid. “I won’t say exploit. Remember the settlers at Jamestown. They came trying to make money with their toehold in the new world. If it hadn’t been for John Rolf smuggling in tobacco, the settlement of America might have been set back decades. Now imagine that those settlers had come to Virginia with their own railroad, fortress, and machine shop. How much quicker would our America have come to be?”

“Bottom line it for us,” said Dillanson. “How much are we talking about?”

“Including the boosters needed, and the lauch costs, as well as the design, construction, and deployment—Seven hundred fifty billion dollars.”

There were more than a few gasps around the room.

“That’s insane,” said Bentlemore.

“There’s no way to raise that kind of capital,” said Dillanson. “It’s more than the market capitalization for the whole company.”

“Actually, it’s not,” said Maxwell Bauer, reading information from his phone. “We’re up thirteen and a third today. Somebody leaked the subject of this meeting.” He shrugged and smiled.

“We’ve got to stop thinking small,” said Astrid. “It’s time to leapfrog these other guys. They’re not the real competition and neither are the Russians. We’ve got to be ahead of the Chinese. They’ve got big boosters. They’ve got the beginnings of a space station. They’ve got a rover on the moon. Now they’re working on their own space planes.”

“Why don’t we just buy the ISS?” asked Carl Maxxim. “The government is begging someone to buy it. We could probably get it for a dollar and few promises.”

“To do what?” shouted Astrid, jumping to her feet. “It’s a tiny space lab with room for six. I don’t care how many inflatable bounce houses they attach to it. We have to think bigger!”

“All right,” said CEO Kate Maxxim. “This is a straight up and down vote. Do we allocate five million dollars for feasibility studies and planning.”

“I vote yay,” said Bauer.

“Yay,” said Martin Bundersmith.

“Nay,” said Dillonson.

“Nay,” said Bentlemore.

“I abstain,” said Astrid.

“I vote yay,” said Dennis Brown.

“My vote is yay,” said Penelope Maxxim.

“I vote yay,” said her brother Carl Maxxim.

“The chair abstains,” finished Kate. “The motion carries.”

 

A Plague of Wizards -Final Proofreading

A Plague of WizardsI’m doing the final proofreading for A Plague of Wizards.  The primary editing was done some time ago and then I set it aside to finish the last few chapters of Kanana: The Jungle Girl.  Now, it seems like I’m reading it again for the first time really.  I’m finding little nuggets that I had forgotten that I put in.

As soon as the final proofreading and formatting is done, it will be available for preorders.  Watch this space for more details.  It shouldn’t be more than a few days.  Remember the release date it October 28.

As soon as the preorders are active, I’ll start posting some excerpts and bits of related information here as well.