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Blood of the Maji
Blood of the Maji
Blood of the Maji
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Blood of the Maji

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Last Ride

We soar into the barest crack that remains, the bellow of my companion the trigger for the power bursting from us, the sword over my head erupting into a massive outward explosion of white sorcery that devours everything. I revel in it even as I accept my true destiny.

Doombringer. Light One. Wild Card of Creator.

Peace engulfs me while we die in the crushing press of the violent clash of their magic and ours.

Syd’s had to say goodbye to her beloved sweets, giving him up to be the new Creator. Depression weighs on her, the fact no one else seems to remember him. And the combination of the two Universes has changed history enough she struggles with memories that only she carries. Her family’s worries about her only make things worse. But, when Oliver comes to her and shares his fears that things aren’t over, she hunts for the final threat, knowing, as she does, her success means the end of everything.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherPatti Larsen
Release dateFeb 20, 2016
ISBN9781927464946
Blood of the Maji
Author

Patti Larsen

About me, huh? Well, my official bio reads like this: Patti Larsen is a multiple award-winning author with a passion for the voices in her head. But that sounds so freaking formal, doesn’t it? I’m a storyteller who hears character's demands so loudly I have to write them down. I love the idea of sports even though sports hate me. I’ve dabbled in everything from improv theater to film making and writing TV shows, singing in an all girl band to running my own hair salon.But always, always, writing books calls me home.I’ve had my sights set on world literary domination for a while now. Which means getting my books out there, to you, my darling readers. It’s the coolest thing ever, this job of mine, being able to tell stories I love, only to see them all shiny and happy in your hands... thank you for reading.As for the rest of it, I’m short (permanent), slightly round (changeable) and blonde (for ever and ever). I love to talk one on one about the deepest topics and can’t seem to stop seeing the big picture. I happily live on Prince Edward Island, Canada, home to Anne of Green Gables and the most beautiful red beaches in the world, with my pug overlord and overlady, six lazy cats and Gypsy Vanner gelding, Fynn.

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    Blood of the Maji - Patti Larsen

    Chapter One

    He’s falling again and I can’t stop him. I reach for him with the desperation of one who will not survive without him. The earth swallows his tall, beautiful form, devouring his strawberry blond waves, his hazel eyes flecked with green, until only one hand reaches upward for me, the earth eating him alive.

    I scream his name, dive for him. It takes forever to hit the ground. It vibrates under me, the tiny seedling bursting from the dark loam that smells of fabric softener and spring. I have to leap away as the oak tree explodes from that small, green bit of life, erupting as though it had been waiting for this moment. It looms over me, vast and powerful, before it turns to steel.

    My hands grasp for the metal tree, tears soaking the now hard ground, but he’s gone and only this monolith of cold remains. But no, it’s hot, heating up under my desperate grasp, burning me as I cry out and fall away.

    Falling, into darkness.

    And then I’m flying. The armor I wear is heavy on my shoulders but I barely feel it, welcome its presence. It’s kept me alive so far, saves me as I take a hit to the chest from the distance while my mount wheels and dives to protect us from attack. The pressure of building power pushes against me, burning through the metal and scorching my skin, bruising my damaged body. It crushes my chest so tight I have to fight for breath. I force my lungs to inflate out of sheer spite, scream a soundless yell of defiance, voice already parched and cracking, failing me.

    But I will not fail.

    My magic pulses, as weary as I am but refusing to quit as the massive wings of my drach friend sweep us forward, his power as unrelenting as my determination. We are together in the end, as we knew we would be and I will not falter for he is with me.

    We must reach them before it’s too late.

    The glowing, white sword of light hangs over my head, weightless, brilliant, shining a beacon in our fore, casting shadows over the sharp, violent spikes that adorn his once smooth, scaled shoulders. He is a weapon from the tip of his snout to the sharp edged blade of his tail, all of his creation now made for war. Designed by Creator to do what must be done.

    We both are, now.

    I clench tight the sword’s hilt in my gauntlet, sweat running from my hot palm down inside my suit of living metal. My mount’s massive head arches backward, fire spouting in a cascade of heat and ash blowing past my cheek. I inhale fire, choke on it, searing my insides. The pain doesn’t matter, won’t stop me. Nothing will.

    Another blow, this one to my head, carrying away the helm that guards my face. I shake off the blow, hair flying clear, ears ringing with the rush of impending death. I embrace it, suck it back like a draught of joy. We’re almost there, the building juggernaut of destructive force between the armies hurtling toward each other narrowing by the instant.

    We’re almost too late. But Fate won’t let us fall. Not now. Not ever.

    We soar into the barest crack that remains, the bellow of my companion the trigger for the power that bursts from us, the sword over my head erupting into a massive outward explosion of white sorcery that devours everything. I revel in it even as I accept my true destiny. Doombringer. Light One. Wild Card of Creator.

    Peace engulfs me while we die in the crushing press of the violent clash of their magic and ours.

    ***

    I open my eyes in the darkness of my room, canopied bed quiet and empty save for me. I’ve curled into a ball, fetal position tight and rigid. It is impossible to unclasp, to release the tension. I need the support, holding myself together with this clasp of arms around knees, chest compressed to hold back my panting.

    It is quiet in the house, oppressive and still. As lonely as my bed. Where is everyone? My magic reaches out, encounters nothing, not another soul. But that’s not right, is it? The house should be full of people. Why then is it so empty?

    But no, wait. There’s another here. I feel myself unwind slowly, my hands unclenching from their grips on my arms to keep me in a ball, my legs relaxing, head turning toward the doorway of my room. And a faint light there.

    He’s smiling at me, his sweet face so kind and gentle. I smile back at my son only to find I can’t, that I’m frozen, unable to move anymore, locked in position as he crosses to me and sits on the side of the bed.

    I can’t even muster a meep of protest, a whimper of my need to sit up, to hold him. Why can’t I move? Panic grips me while he bends close, his young face now aged, his father’s face. I weep silently as my darling Gabriel presses his warm lips to my cheek.

    Mom, he says, voice ringing like a bell in my head. Wake up.

    ***

    I sat upright, the bed shaking with the force of my waking, the room dim but faint light making it through the heavy curtains pulled tight over my bedroom windows. No canopy over me, just the silly, pink chandelier my mother once thought would endear her to me, a fixture, a piece of our history I never had the heart to remove.

    My body trembled, breath coming in short, hitching pants as I did my best to unravel the dreams I’d just lived through. Crisp and clear, all three of them, blending one into the other, though the last felt the most real.

    Why was I dreaming of Liam again? I’d hoped that one was gone. Same with the last battle precognition. It should have been over, yes? Max and I hadn’t been forced to ride to the rescue and sacrifice our lives in the end. No, Gabriel—

    My son.

    My throat closed over a moment, forcing me to bend in half where I sat, forehead pressing to my knees while I unclogged my windpipe and managed to breathe again.

    My son. Was gone. He’d saved Max, saved me from that final battle by becoming Creator.

    Or, had he? Was there something I was missing? I sat up again, looked around the room that was mine when I was a teenager and wrinkled my nose at the scent of myself. Old sheets crinkled beneath me, tainted by the faint odor of sweat. I sniffed absently at one armpit and grunted. My mouth tasted like it hadn’t been visited by a toothbrush in weeks, more likely a home for something that curled up and died. My shaking hands caught at the strings of my greasy hair, pushing them away from my clammy forehead. Suddenly disgusted with myself, I tossed back the covers.

    Tried to. They seemed so heavy, I seemed so heavy, arms struggling to find the strength to perform such a simple act. All powerful, immortal and practically invulnerable to everything and this physical motion was beyond me.

    Three minds sighed inside me, uncoiling as I felt myself uncoil, offering support. Enough I was able to shift the covers back, swing my legs over the side of the bed. And stare at my bare feet on the floor while sobs I couldn’t control took over everything.

    How long had I lain here? How much time did I lose to the comfort of the gray that devoured the grief I now expelled through my gaping mouth, from my burning eyes, coughed painfully from my aching chest? Did it matter? Maybe. If the dreams meant anything.

    He came to me. It felt like he was really here. And though I knew no one else remembered him—aside from a choice few—Gabriel had come to me for a reason.

    We’ll figure out the details later, my vampire sent, faint but there.

    First things first. Shaylee sagged within me.

    Right. My demon’s fire crackled, though without her usual vigor. You stink.

    I nodded as I wiped at the ribbon of drool that hung from my lower lip, buried my face in the hem of my dirty t-shirt to absorb the last of my tears. And tried to stand. Took me three attempts. When I finally managed it I stood there in the dimness for a long moment, wavering on baby deer legs, feeling ancient.

    A glance at the clock by my bed told me it had been three weeks since Gabriel chose to unite the two Universes, since I did my Doombringer thing and let my son go be Creator. The date flashed at me as though with joy at my flinching understanding, beating me with glowing letters and numbers. October, autumn well begun.

    It was almost Samhain.

    Nothing had changed. I could easily sink back down onto the bed and retreat yet again. Felt the gray there waiting for me while the girls held still, silent and patient. Didn’t seem like they were going to fight me if I chose to go back into retreat over taking action.

    And yet, everything was different. I felt awakened, if that made sense. Like Gabriel’s command had reached into my very soul and refused to let me go.

    Okay then. Shower, change of clothes, food. And the real world again.

    Each step took great effort, though by the time I reached the door on the other side of the room I was feeling a little stronger. The hall was empty but full of light. I blinked into the daylight streaming up from the downstairs, staggering across the hallway to the bathroom door, locking myself inside.

    The hot water felt good on my skin, soap doing its job. I took the time to wash my hair thoroughly, adding a nice dose of conditioner and letting it sit as I stood under the stream of mostly steam and let it pound against me.

    By the time I emerged and wiped the moisture from the mirror, I felt more alive, the heavy, debilitating weakness fading. I knew that feeling, had been here before. And over Gabriel then, too. I’d let myself fall into the gray when I’d thought him dead, kidnapped in fact by Ameline Benoit so many years ago.

    The woman who looked back at me from my reflection seemed old, face lined and weary. Dark circles added depth to my eyes, my mouth pulled downward as if I’d never smile again. Maybe I wouldn’t. My cheeks had grown sunken, collar bone a sharp gash across my upper chest. I sagged against the counter and tried to recognize myself.

    Gave up on that in favor of brushing my teeth three times in rapid succession, ignoring the haunted, grief filled stare behind my gaze. I’d survived worse, right? We’d see.

    With fresh clothes draped over my lean frame, my son’s need for me to rejoin the world keeping me going, I chose life.

    And went downstairs.

    ***

    Chapter Two

    Abnormal, this brightness beckoning me down the staircase into the real world. Upstairs felt surreal as I left it, as though the space above held time in its grasp and didn’t want to let me go. I could feel them below, their power pulsing between them, the normal flow of emotion and, as I neared the middle of the stairs, the drone of their talk became words I could almost decipher with a little attention.

    That made me waver, grasp the bannister, hold it tight with my left hand as I drew a breath that felt like the first in a long time. How had I missed the staleness of the air on the second floor? As if my lurking there, lost in the gray, tainted the very soul of the house. A wash of my power, cleansing and warm, evicted the lost sense of nothing I’d left behind. Magic swept open curtains and aired out the musk in my room, that space left to its own devices behind me.

    My knees wobbled slightly when their power paused, sensing mine. Was I really ready to face them, to speak as though I cared what they had to say, to hear their troubles and make them mine as I always seemed to do? My socked foot touched down on the hardwood at the bottom of the staircase, slipping slightly as I pivoted away from the hall that led to the kitchen, eyes scanning over the living room and further as I continued to turn, staring down the narrow way past the door that had been Gram’s. To the backyard on the other side of the screen and glass and wood at the end.

    It called me as it always did. Solitude and quiet in the stillness of my favorite retreat. But I’d had enough loneliness I decided, my heart turning me back, pushing me off from the cool wood of the railing toward the light.

    I drifted, as though still partially asleep, across the beam of sunlight cast over the wood beneath me through the front door. The formal one, the one we never used unless guests who didn’t know us well came to visit. I’d met Quaid at that door for the first time, his adoptive, evil parents. Welcomed coven leaders and enemies through that doorway.

    Passed it by, slowing my steps as the kitchen’s light drew me on. I could see her in the periphery, waiting for me, her hip pressed to the countertop, dark hair threaded with gray pulled tightly back from her face. She’d abandoned her fuzzy socks, her worn housecoats and pastel dresses when she’d become a sorceress and then a witch and coven leader again. But my grandmother’s soul had never changed and it was the essence of Ethpeal Hayle that finally drew me on.

    Drew me home.

    She moved forward the instant I passed from the hardwood to the tile, over the threshold, as though that boundary had kept us apart. Not my retreat from her, the one who knew me best. Silent, unjudging, supportive, she embraced me and held me close, with her body and her magic, Gram’s love so much I choked on it.

    I gasped into her hair, clung to her with hands so thin they hurt when I curled them around her, sagging into her strength. Used up, wasted, lost. How had I let myself fall so far?

    She didn’t speak or offer comforting words we both knew were useless and an insult to my hurt. Instead, she simply stood there, a rock of magic and flesh, the other half of my soul because I’d carried hers for so long.

    When at last I managed to straighten, to cough through my pain, to pull myself back together enough I could stand on my own two feet without her, I leaned away and met her eyes. Blue, sharp and sparking with emotion so powerful it almost drove me to hug her again and never let her go.

    Girl. Gram cleared her throat, kissed my cheek to hide her tears, though there was never hiding between us, not really. Not since she buried her magic in me when I was just a baby and lost it there for seventeen years. No walls between. You look like hell.

    The laugh was real, the pain of it, too. But I smiled as best I could, knowing it must have looked grotesque without truth behind it. She allowed me that falseness, nodded and wiped at her tears with a brusque efficiency that was all Gram.

    Thanks. I sounded as good as I looked, sandpaper voice rasping. I smell coffee.

    Someone moved, too fast, knocking into a chair, cursing softly while her red hair bounced around her. Tippy Meeks. I’d forgotten her, forgotten the dear girls who had been my college friends, who came to Wilding Springs to save me when Sashenka Hensley abandoned our coven and her place as my second to go to her hateful sister. Though, I couldn’t abide hate right now, shedding it into the gray. At least it was still good for something, if only to be a hiding place for things I just didn’t have the heart to face.

    Tippy hurried forward, impressive chest straining inside a knitted sweater so tight I feared her endowments would pop free at any second. Made me grunt with familiarity, accept the hot cup of java from her as she skidded to a halt next to me. She smiled—Tippy always smiled—but with hurt and worry mixed in, washing over me.

    Too much. My hand slipped, the mug falling in slow motion and I made no effort to retrieve it. Instead, I half spun, ready to run back upstairs. This I couldn’t handle, not yet. Maybe never again.

    Did Gram know? Clearly. Her power wrapped around the mug, saved it inches from the floor even as the coven leader of the Hayle family turned to Tippy, one hand outstretched.

    Give us a few minutes, would you, dear? She forcibly led the redhead to the door, scooted her outside, closing it firmly behind her. I looked away, unable to watch, knowing Tippy would be staring. As soon as she was gone I exhaled, sank into a chair, knees buckling beneath me.

    Gram sat next to me, sliding the mug toward me as if nothing had happened. Only then did he creep forward, silver Persian body crouched low on the tabletop, head drooping as he settled next to my hand and started to purr. I didn’t have the willpower to stop his magic from doing its thing. Comforting, though. Acceptable.

    I would need to shield when I had the time to think about it. The family prodded me gently, one at a time then in bunches, knowing I was awake, thanks to Tippy no doubt. I did my best not to be angry with her, sending that into the gray, too. The girls sighed inside me, their walls rising enough I didn’t have to protect myself after all.

    Thank you, I whispered to them.

    For all of us, my demon sent.

    Tell me. That was a little better, not so harsh. I actually sounded human, if not yet myself. What’s happening. I couldn’t even formulate it as a question, my words dropping like lead weights into my coffee cup.

    Everything is fine. Everything about that statement hit like an insult to the trauma I’d endured. Gram didn’t force cheer into her tone, bless her. She simply sat back, arms crossed over her chest, shrugged.

    I looked up, scrunching my nose at her tone. Best I could muster in protest. Quaid, I said, accusing her with names. Femke. Looked back down into my mug. A sweet little face I missed with a sudden ache wavered in my mind. I’d almost forgotten what my own daughter looked like. Ethie.

    Sass’s purr faded, one paw reaching out to settle on my wrist. Where the black ribbon rested. It didn’t twitch, held still, the soul of the drach that was Max in the Dark Universe still with me. I should wonder some things about him, needed answers still about his arrival, his ability to cross over to this Universe. But questions were too much work, I realized.

    Gram sighed, nodded. But it was Sass who spoke. Quaid is still alive, he said. I didn’t feel relief. Should have, shouldn’t I? It was beyond me yet, I guess. Miriam is doing her best to delay the inevitable with old law and confusion.

    My grandmother snorted softly. I’ve never heard of half the crap she’s digging up. Admiration for her daughter. How lovely. "Better than I’d have managed. Though I’d have broken the damned fool out by now and to hell

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