Tuesday 2 February 2016

Excerpts & Teasers - 'Gift of the Blood God - Dark Day' (Faelings Doom series #2) by Sydney Whyte





Torn by loyalties, plagued by disbelief, drawn irrevocably to sensuality and desire, how would the twins survive the promise of this ominous and fatefully dark day?



“No!”
Panic erupted in visions of dread.  She saw the dark hole only seconds before being pushed into it.  Swallowed by night and stench, and silent screaming; she fell downwards – almost slowly, like Alice into the bowels of the earth - landing heavily on mouldering leaf litter, fetid plumes rising like spores releasing into her face.
Lorrie coughed, spat, “Oh… god!”  Pushing herself up hurriedly, grimacing at the slimy feel on her hands, she wiped them frantically on her jeans and spun around in the darkness trying to find where she had fallen from.  It was pitch black.  Her eyes strained for any hint of light.
A faint crack almost too small to detect formed an arc above her head.  Lorrie reached to touch it but found it was further away than she had anticipated.  “Hey!” she yelled, “Hey!  You can’t leave me down here!”
For a moment Lorrie listened for any sign of relenting but no movement came from above.  “Come back here.”  She jumped at the slash of light, trying to reach it, swiping nothing but air.  “You come back and let me out!  Come back!”
God, she was trapped, in a pit.  God!  An airless hole in the ground, in a stench that clamped her nostrils shut in self-defence and knotted her stomach in desperation.  “Come back you bastard!  You fucking, sick bastard!  Come back!”  Her frantic jumping increased until she slid on the slimy floor and fell again.  Panting, she cried blind anguished tears.  “Let me out…  Let! Me! Out!”
No movement.  No one came.  The bitter tears scolded her as in despair Lorrie buried her face in her arms.  What had she done to deserve this?  Why was her mind set on tormenting her?  Shouldn’t there be a tunnel, a peaceful river, calm brilliance, heavenly light?  Not this utter desolate darkness.
Suddenly the tears stopped, a nasty thought creeping silently into her head…  She saw a white room with padded walls, saw herself huddled in a weeping heap in one corner, screaming from delusions, from a madness that had overcome her and sent her into a frenzy of fantasy.  Perhaps there had been no car trip, no landslide or consuming fiery red power… Lorrie opened her eyes eagerly, certain that now she had guessed, the night would peel back.  Fearfully, desperately she wanted to see the white room, to know that suddenly she was sane again and this imagined reality put behind her.
Darkness pressed hungrily across her vision.  “God! God!”  She bit into the knuckles stuffed into her mouth.  This was worse than anything that had happened to her yet.  Worse than thinking herself somewhere else while reality was a padded cell, worse than separation and capture.  It was even worse than realising she was going over the edge of a cliff, dangling into a vortex of waiting death.  She was alone, completely and utterly; forced to face herself and her fears without the facility of any distraction.
The earth seemingly squirmed with life, teaming with crawling, scuttling creatures.  Gases popped in fatal plumes; fungus growing in the cool depths of the moist hole, stealthy sounds assaulting her imagination.  The smell of decay, the reek of mouldering excrement, the heavy laden odour of dirt all crushed down on her from above.  And what if it rained?  What then?  She would drown.
Never had she imagined such isolation, such fearful wretchedness.  It had been the furthest thing from her mind as Simeon had whispered to her that very morning, “This is home,” and Lorrie had looked curiously towards the vista before her even as all brought their mounts to a halt, they too wishing to wallow in its glory.
Her buttocks no longer protested the feel of the saddle nor the sway of the animal beneath after so many days.  It was as if she had developed the necessary callus to numb herself to the pain, and had acquired the rolling motion of hips to match its jarring gait.
Time in Simeon’s company had done nothing to diminish her growing awe for the man - her constant companion.  He spoke her language, held her safe upon his horse, the vertigo easing back at his mere touch. He had administered to her every need and more pertinently, saved her life from the fall that would have surely doomed her.  Still Lorrie could not get over his miraculous return to health.  How could he have done it?  He was solid and whole, no mark left of the horrific injuries he had suffered in the attack that had precipitated his act of bravery. He had pulled her back from her horror, from inevitable death as she had fallen over the lip of the precipice.  He was beautiful, and invincible.  And he had saved her.
But now he – no, they - had brought her to their home, the journey finally over.
The first sight of the towering oaks was breath-taking, the beauty of the massive tree-scape rendering all thought, all fear invalid.  Lorrie had thought instantly of her camera bag, almost reaching instinctively for it.  Damn! Not here, nothing here!  No pencil, charcoal, no ink, and no paper; nothing with which to capture the moment of its revelation.
The horses had stood upon the nude yellow, pitted-clay ridge, their riders admiring, even as she did, the vast green swath of horizon that jutted as majestically into the clarity of blue sky as any mountain. It was wondrous.
“’Tis called the Fae Wood,” Simeon had advised and she had turned her head as the words whispered a warm breath over her sensitive ear, her cheek almost caressing his lips with an intimate shudder for his closeness.  God he had lovely lips!  Equal to, or if she was honest with herself, even lovelier than those forbidding, perfect lips pressed taut about their tense leader’s mouth.  And yet weren’t that man’s the features she caught herself studying more and more often as the days had passed since her rescue from the gorge, not Simeon’s.  It was a morbid fascination, blatant curiosity and yes, tinged with fear for she had been unable to understand it.  Why did she find herself looking at the man, that rough, hard, prohibitive exterior that shouted a cold and collected demeanour? What did she expect to see; hints of fiery passion churning hot enough to consume her?  No!  Of course not!  Then, why?  Why did she find herself doing that very thing so often?

They called him Tavis Eagle-born and while it seemed a strange title to Lorrie, a slightly primitive moniker, it felt eminently appropriate.  Oh, dear, Lorrie had shaken herself and abruptly pulled away from Simeon only to turn into the flare of fiery brilliant green eyes that sent a blazing surge of guilt through her as Tavis came to a halt beside them.  The man drew her attention like a scab beneath her fringe-line, to be thoughtlessly picked at with no effect than a further itch, prolonging the satisfaction of more pain and affliction.  Shit!

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