Took the plunge and decided to be a bit less shy about the awards Martuk … the Holy has received. So I slapped it on the cover. 🙂
Here’s the ebook cover:
And this will be the print version:
Love it, love it, love it. 🙂
Thoughts?
Took the plunge and decided to be a bit less shy about the awards Martuk … the Holy has received. So I slapped it on the cover. 🙂
Here’s the ebook cover:
And this will be the print version:
Love it, love it, love it. 🙂
Thoughts?
An excerpt from my award-winning debut novel Martuk … the Holy —
A large room.
Yes, I could see it, the image unfolding around me, the vision a great wave crashing at my feet, my life disappearing as this reality rolled near, swallowing me.
A glowing box of pale stone. White walls soaring to a mass of rock floating high above. Pale and perfect, it was, this ceiling, glowing in the shadows, an immense white cloud reaching from corner to corner.
There were men standing near. A group. Huddled and whispering. Flashes of red, flashes of gold. The faint sound of whispers. Of secrets and lies.
I couldn’t see them, no. They darted in and out my sight, creeping like a mist on the periphery, impossible to catch. I could feel them, though. Their plotting and planning. I could feel them.
And children. There were children. Or rather small boys. Dressed in simple skirts of rough woolen fabric tied at their slender waists with crude rope, their chests bare and smooth, their shoulders slight. The shining perfection of the stone beneath interrupted by their delicate brown feet. They stood quietly, their hands clasped. Subservient and patient. Anonymous.
Secret rooms waited. There, to the side, the flicker of torchlight dancing beneath closed doors. Heavy locks hidden under dried clay. More secrets. More lies.
But there were other people, too. Strange and quiet. Unmoving. Still.
Ah, I see now. They were made of stone, these figures, much like the thick columns behind them. Standing as tall as a man, their gaze was fixed on the large wide ribbon of heavy gold which slices the center of the room. A path, really, running the entire length from wall to wall before spilling up several wide stairs to a large chair.
Carved of solid rock and gleaming, a burst of brightly colored cloth for its seat, it sat, this chair, this throne, looking much too large for any one man. And in front of the stairs, on both sides of the gold fabric, waited row upon row of little bits of clay fashioned into the forms of tiny people, smaller lumps clasped to their molded chests. They stood not quite knee high, trapped in perpetual prayer.
They still plotted and planned, they did, those lurking behind to whisper. I could sense them watching me from the dark wrapped in red and gold. Listening. Afraid. Could feel the dishonesty, smell the hypocrisy. Taste the evil.
And these smells, of smooth stone and incense and the cool scent of water carried on hot sand. They weren’t my smells. They were not the intoxicating cold scent of rich earth and the shade of gnarled tree trunks. This place, the gold and stone and tiny figures trapped in prayer, wasn’t home. Wasn’t where I collapsed into deep cushions of fragrant grass, the sun warm on my face, colorful birds crowding the branches of the nearby trees, their song carried on the breeze and filling the air.
There was something else, though. Something happening. Here in this vision. Worry. Fear. Revulsion. Dread, even. Something approaching with the certainty of a sunrise. Only ominous. Like a great storm. Of lashing rain and howling wind.
It was coming, this thing. This confusion and delusion and terror. Waiting around the corner. Not yet within my sight. Lurching its way toward us. A monstrosity stumbling through the doors.
It didn’t belong, this thing listing near. Didn’t feel at home among the statues, the silk, the ribbon of gold. Ignored the scent of cool water carried on hot sand and the little figures trapped in prayer. Didn’t feel welcomed by those who linger like a stench, their red and gold inching near only to crawl back to the safety of the dark.
I noticed the footprints. There, on the floor. Five toes followed by a slender sole. The familiar roundness of a heel. Scattered about the vast room, they were unmistakable, staining the polished ground at our feet. Following themselves before stopping, awkwardly dancing to the right and then faltering back, pausing, and wandering to the left. Haphazard, they felt. Uneven and confused.
They were made of blood.
Here’s my new, fancy-schmancy cover for Martuk … the Holy.
Ebook covers should go live soon-ish. Print hopefully in a week or so.
Many thanks to my kinda sorta always forever cool graphic designer Timothy Burch. All kinds of talent here, kids.
🙂
excerpt from Martuk … The Holy
I looked so small.
The Dead Boy, his golden corpse fixed in the far corner, approached cautiously and gazed with me at my body on the altar.
I thought I was more. Bigger. Stronger. More powerful.
But this?
Torn, filthy cloth sticking to my sweaty skin. The Elder only now removing the golden cup from my dead lips as the guards approached. The black form an ethereal vapor slithering from my neck to slide its way down my throat, red drool sliding from my mouth and running down my cheek.
To see my life reduced to a pliant bag of bones being pulled and dragged from the stone, my skull smacking the bloody altar with a crack, was sickening. My dreams, my hopes, my plans … done.
Will they come?
The Dead Boy watched me expectantly. As if I, being older and therefore somehow wiser, had the answer.
Those in the fog. There. Will they come?
I glanced up and, yes, there was the Veil, a low murmur emanating from its murky depths, shadowy figures wandering aimlessly. Or waiting.
There were no claws reaching to grab us. No malice. No anger. No vengeful spirits hungry for our souls. The figures who lingered were kind. Gentle.
You must go to them, I answered, wordlessly.
The Dead Boy’s eyes grew wide, the finality of this task overwhelming him. Frightening him.
Go to them? he repeated.
Yes, you must take the first steps.
So young he was, this tiny ghost whose hand would easily be lost in mine.
He had seen perhaps five, maybe six summers by the time they covered him in gold.
Five, maybe six summers before he drank the brew which deadened his senses, the poisonous concoction hidden within muting but not erasing the agony of the hardening metal suffocating him.
Five, maybe six summers before the gold peeled the skin from his flesh with each breath, the inside of this sarcophagus of skin and bones stained red with his seeping blood, the syrupy liquid running to pool around his delicate toes.
Yes, I answered. Your hand. Reach out. Go to them. Those who love you will come. Guide you. You’ll be safe.
He came, suddenly, the Priest. His presence interrupting my sight.
Although he towered above me, my gaze the height of one who’d seen perhaps five, maybe six summers, the hooded eyes, the smooth, dark skin beaded with sweat, the pink tongue darting behind a quick smile were all unmistakably clear.
And so close, he was. So close I could smell the skin and see the lashes ringing the eyes. Lap up the salty drops sliding down the bronzed skin of his long neck with my own tongue.
“You’ll be safe,” the Priest had said as he bundled the boy in his arms.
“You’ll be safe” he had whispered as he snuggled him close while walking him away from all he knew.
“Safe,” he had promised as he offered him to those who would feed him the wine, paint him in gold, stain his lips red, and create the golden corpse he would soon become.
“You’ll be safe” had been the lie which had ended his life.
The Dead Boy backed away from me, fear in his eyes.
I reached my hand toward him, but he ignored me, slipping back into the sarcophagus. Back into the security of his dead body.
He was lost to me.
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