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The Daemonhold Curse [MultiFormat]
eBook by Teel James Glenn
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eBook Category: Fantasy
eBook Description: Erique Shoutte, warrior priest of the Kova, five years earlier failed to save Lady Caution Daemon from a horrible death. Now her younger sister, Fidelity, has come to him for protection from the same sinister threat. This ancient curse warns that each female of the line will die, drained of blood, before the morning of her twenty-first birthday. No Daemon female has survived in three hundred years. Now, the cycle has begun again with the deaths of three that always precede the murder of a Daemon family descendant. Lord Shoutte and his long-time friend, the fierce swordswoman Dame Arinna Cabal, undertake to save Fidelity, despite attacks of religious radicals and thugs. But can they solve the mystery and save the new Lady Daemon or will they also fall victim to The Daemonhold Curse?
eBook Publisher: epress-online, Published: 2007
Fictionwise Release Date: September 2007
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Available eBook Formats [MultiFormat - What's this?]: Adobe Acrobat (PDF) [541 KB], eReader (PDB) [166 KB], Palm Doc (PDB) [157 KB], Rocket/REB1100 (RB) [141 KB], Microsoft Reader (LIT) [180 KB] - PocketPC 1.0+ Compatible, Franklin eBookMan (FUB) [199 KB], hiebook (KML) [378 KB], Sony Reader (LRF) [247 KB], iSilo (PDB) [129 KB], Mobipocket (PRC) [163 KB], Kindle Compatible (MOBI) [217 KB], OEBFF Format (IMP) [217 KB]
Words: 47995 Reading time: 137-191 min.
Microsoft Reader (LIT) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED
Adobe Acrobat (PDF) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED All Other formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED
ISBN: 978-1-934258-07-1

Chapter OneIn the hundred years since the deaths in Arkhumshire, the surface of the world of Altiva had changed little. The old Kingdom fell and the Third Age of Man, the so-called Age of Reason, went on with the jealousy, hate, intolerance and desire that had become the touchstone for human existence. The two suns, the smaller, red Younger Brother and the blue Older Brother, rose and set in sequence ad infinitum, and life went on. In the dark of a small cell of the Academy Kova that nestled in the center of the capital city of the country of Cozen, a man tossed in troubled sleep. Standing, he would be a tall man, and well-muscled with long, straight, black hair hanging to his waist. While he tossed in the bed, his hair escaped a sleep braid and exploded around his head in a tangled mess reflecting his inner turmoil. Suddenly, he shot awake, covered in sweat and breathing hard as if he had been running a sprint. "By the Rhythem," He gasped in expletive, "the grave calls to me." His gray eyes lingered on the inner landscape of horror, focused on what he had witnessed. Before him he stared at the apparition of a beautiful face, green-eyed, red-haired and pleading, a face from his past. "I'm sorry, Caution." He said to the phantom woman, "I didn't mean to kill you." * * * *The two moons danced in and out of the clouds above the green fields and forest hollows of Arkhumshire. On this, an unusually cold night for so early in the fall, dense fog crawled throughout the hollows. Wrapped in cloaks against the unseasonable chill, two figures rode down the country road on two vorns. The antlered mounts snorted and bleated in protest at being out in the cold night air. "I'd check down by The Old Miller's Bridge around midnight, Connel," one of the riders said in a quietly commanding voice. "That's when that grog place in the old shack closes, and--" "I know, father," Connel said. "Seems I was doing just that myself not too long ago." The two men laughed. "Was a time, son," the older man said, "before you went off to fight with the Guards, when I would've said you were too wild, too restless to be happy up here being a country sheriff. You've mellowed, lost some of those rough edges we used to fight about--" "I haven't lost all my fight yet, old man--" Connel said with a smile. The two men laughed again. "You make this old sheriff proud boy, but I'm not so old I can't whip your--" The mustached sheriff's shrewd face took on a serious aspect. Connel saw the look. "What's the matter, father? You look like you've just seen a ghost!" "No," the older man said in a quiet voice. "Just remembering old Tirum Brandal said almost those very words to me the night before I--" Connel was a handsome man with a world-weary aspect to his face, but he had caring, intelligent eyes and he focused them intently on his father. "You found him, didn't you?" "Almost five turns ago," the sheriff said. "His face was torn up so bad that if it wasn't for his signet of office, I wouldn't have known him." He shuddered with remembrance but tried to pass it off as a chill from the night. His son noticed and said nothing about it. "They never caught anybody, did they?" "No. Some said it was a wild tvek; but I never believed that. After them other three, Lady Daemon being the last, the killer just went to ground." "What's your guess--a Markoffan or somebody from that Ashun cult?" "Drifter, more likely." The sheriff said, "Sure wish I'd have collared that bastard; but I'm retiring so it'll be your job in a year." Father and son sat in silence, letting the tension dissipate. The two vorns pulled up in front of the sheriff's isolated waddle-and-daub house, where the sheriff climbed down with a show of groaning. "Gonna feel good to get these old bones under the comforter." "'Night, father. Tell mom I'll stop by tomorrow," Connel said. "'Night, son. Take a care getting home." The sheriff waved to Connel and turned to walk his vorn to the little lean-to shed that served as stable beside the house. He whistled an old dance tune softly to himself. Connel watched him go for a moment, smiled to himself and turned his vorn to head back up the road toward town. The sheriff unsaddled his vorn, and threw a saddle blanket over its dappled back. He set out some feed and scratched the beast between its antlers. "We could both use a little rest tonight, eh fellow?" The vorn bleated as if to answer. When the sheriff turned to approach the door of his cottage the vorn made an unsettled noise and stamped nervous hooves. The sheriff stopped and stood looking around. "What is it that's upset you, Dagger?" A rustling at some bushes near the house attracted his attention. He stepped toward the bush and halted, drawing his belt knife. The bushes rustled again followed by a low sound like a growl. The sheriff took a step back and brandished his knife as if to reassure himself. In an instant, a woman dressed in a white flowing gown emerged from another bush some twenty feet away, drawing the sheriff's attention. Fog crept up from the hollows, giving the appearance that the woman floated forward toward the man. As the young woman moved closer, he admired her beauty and red hair. There was something vaguely familiar about her features and he tried to focus on her face, but when she got almost to arms length his eyes were drawn to a jagged open wound in her throat. "Lady Daemon?" He ventured looking again into her green, haunted eyes. She smiled and hissed just as the blade of a rapier shot out of the bush beside the sheriff. He screamed. Barely half a league down the road, Connel heard his father's cry of agony. He spun his mount about and raced back. When he galloped into sight of the cottage clearing, his mother was already out of the house and by his father's side. He leapt from his mount and was at the old man's side almost before the scream died. But his father was already gone to the world beyond. He cradled the lifeless man. His mother cried hysterically beside him. He looked up to speak to his mother, tears blurring his vision, and started for a second, for he thought he saw a figure at a distance in the fog. A spectral red haired woman laughing hideously...
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