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	<title>The Good, The Bad and The Unread &#187; Tairen Soul Series</title>
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	<description>Reading, Ranting and Reviewing by Readers</description>
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		<title>GUEST AUTHOR DAY: Last Words from a Fan</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/guest-author-day-last-words-from-a-fan/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/guest-author-day-last-words-from-a-fan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Oct 2010 21:00:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Guests and Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crown of Crystal Flame]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lord of the Fading Lands]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[We thought it would be nice to hear from a fan of C.L. Wilson&#8217;s and her works. C.L. has a Yahoogroup fan club that grows larger each day as more and more fans discovers her books and join. Those die-hard fans have anxiously and sometimes impatiently waited for this last book in their favorite series [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062018965/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Crown of Crystal Flame" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062018965.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="100" height="160" /></a>We thought it would be nice to hear from a fan of C.L. Wilson&#8217;s and her works. C.L. has a Yahoogroup fan club that grows larger each day as more and more fans discovers her books and join.</p>
<p>Those die-hard fans have anxiously and sometimes impatiently waited for this last book in their favorite series and they&#8217;ve kept themselves occupied by rereading the previous books, playing &#8220;what if&#8221; on the Yahoo loop, along with Tairen Soul trivia and quote games. They are a dedicated bunch.</p>
<p>So fan Heidi Skinner stepped up the plate to give us a last few words about her excitement over Ms. Wilson&#8217;s series and what it&#8217;s meant to her.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d like to thank Heidi for her contribution today, as well as C.L. Wilson for her awesome series and taking the time to be with us on this very busy day for her. It&#8217;s been a fun day and we appreciate all of you stopping by to join in.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s Heidi.</p>
<p>Wow! I can&#8217;t believe the time is finally here! There are no words for how excited I am that <em>Crown of Crystal Flame</em> is about to be released! This month of October has flown by, spending most of the time on C.L. Wilson’s website and <a title="C.L. Wilson Blog" href="http://blog.clwilson.com/" target="_blank">blog</a>, reading about and joining in on the release countdown of <em>CoCF</em>, answering questions each day to test one’s knowledge of her past books so you’re ready to read what happens to Rain and Ellie in their final book.</p>
<p>C.L. Wilson has really taken a lot of time this last month on her website and in her Yahoogroup to respond to posts from fans who ask questions about events in this last book in the Tairen Soul series or even try to finagle information out of her because they’re too eager to wait. It&#8217;s nice to read books from an author who takes the time to chat with you individually and makes you feel like you are a part of this awesome series she’s written.</p>
<p>To me this series has meant quite a bit. Since I picked up the first book, <em>Lord of the Fading Lands</em>, and read the part where, despite all the chaos that has happened, and as Rain and Ellie are standing in the palace with King Dorian, Ellie is ready to blame herself for all of that chaos, Rain grabs her chin, looks into her eyes and tells her that she has done nothing wrong, that she is bright and shining, I have been hooked. That might be one of the smaller parts of the books, but to me that statement to Ellie from Rain kind of sums up the series, no darkness holds dominion over the light.</p>
<p>It’s such a privilege to read all of these books, to see Rain and Ellie&#8217;s story further develop, to see her learn how to accept her magic&#8230;&#8230;and kick some Mage butt along the way! <img src='http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' />  I can&#8217;t wait to read how and if Rain and Ellie&#8217;s bond will be completed. Will her parents and sisters be saved? Will good conquer all once again?</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t know about you, but by the time this post appears on Tuesday evening, I will probably already have my copy of <em>Crown of Crystal Flame</em> read!</p>
<p>Heidi</p>
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		<title>OVERVIEW: Queen of Song and Souls</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/overview-queen-of-song-and-souls/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Oct 2010 20:00:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Excerpt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grade A]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guests and Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[October 2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paranormal Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queen of Song and Souls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Action begins the war in this edition of the series in Queen of Song and Souls. I remember my heart thudding with each throw of a fey&#8217;cha or thrust of a sword or toss of a magical ball of fire. Ms. Wilson pulls no punches in the beginning of this war with the Eld mages. [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Queen of Song and Souls" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960604.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="97" height="160" /></a>Action begins the war in this edition of the series in <a title="Queen of Song and Souls" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Queen of Song and Souls</em></a>. I remember my heart thudding with each throw of a fey&#8217;cha or thrust of a sword or toss of a magical ball of fire. Ms. Wilson pulls no punches in the beginning of this war with the Eld mages.</p>
<p>The emotion is  high when Ellie is unable to complete her truemate bond with Rain, not knowing why, which pushes him closer and closer to the dying madness that will take him from her permanently if she never succeeds.</p>
<p>This book was to have been the last of the series, but Ms. Wilson&#8217;s brain and talent work on overdrive. Thank goodness, her fans say!</p>
<p>My review of <em>QoSaS</em> is below, along with an excerpt from the book. Enjoy!</p>
<p>Sandy M&#8217;s review of <a title="Queen of Song and Souls" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><strong>Queen of Song and Souls (Tairen Soul, Book 4)</strong></a> by <a title="C.L. Wilson" href="http://clwilson.com/index.htm" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson</a><br />
<em>Fantasy Romance published by Leisure Books 27 Oct 09</em></p>
<p>This is one of those books you can&#8217;t wait to get your hands on. Anticipation courses through you as you open it up and finally get a taste of the wonderful writing, get reacquainted with old friends, and get caught up in the new joys and tragedies they face. But then when you reach the halfway mark in the story, it becomes one of those books that you don&#8217;t want to ever end. You want to slow down in your reading and make it last so much longer than the day you&#8217;ve already spent with it, but you simply can&#8217;t. Everything about this book hooks your emotions and puts you through the wringer over and over again, leaving you both overjoyed and saddened at the same time and also leaving you wanting more.</p>
<p>Right off the bat in this latest installment in her Tairen Soul series, C.L. Wilson not only puts her fans through the emotional wringer, but she also squeezes their heart until it either has to burst with happiness or break with heartache. And all of that is done with that richness of writing that Ms. Wilson is now known for. That alone is worth picking up the books in this series.</p>
<p>Rain and Ellie are still on their course toward their bond of truemates. Ellie has still yet to complete her bond, thus the madness that is inflicted on the mate who has bonded has begun for Rain, the knowledge of which he&#8217;s trying to keep from her as they make their way across the land to gather allies in the Mage war that has already taken too many lives. The scenes in which Rain loses control, full of bloodlust, are terrific but heart-rending scenes.</p>
<p>See the remainder of the <em>Queen of Song and Souls</em> review <a title="Sandy M's Queen of Song and Souls review" href="http://goodbadandunread.com/2009/11/23/review-queen-of-song-and-souls-by-c-l-wilson/" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>
<p><img title="purple_divider.jpg" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/thumbs/thumbs_purple_divider.jpg" alt="purple_divider.jpg" /></p>
<blockquote>
<p style="text-align: center;">Prologue</p>
<p>Celieria ~ the Garreval</p>
<p>She was only nine years old, and she was going to die.</p>
<p>Lillis Baristani clung to her beloved friend, Earth master Kieran vel Solande, and showered his throat with frightened tears.</p>
<p>Around them the world had gone mad. Magic, blades, and barbed <em>sel’dor</em> arrows filled the air. Blood ran red on the ground. Below, at the base of the Rhakis mountains, dozens of vile, snarling, monstrous wolf-beasts called <em>darrokken</em> were charging up the slope towards the small, fleeing party while the creatures’ evil masters flung globe after globe of blue-white Mage Fire to cut off all chance of escape.</p>
<p>Whatever the Mage Fire touched disintegrated on contact…not dissolved …simply disappeared. Entire chunks of the mountain evaporated in an instant, and the ground was shifting and shaking beneath Kieran’s feet.</p>
<p>“Kieran!” his friend Kiel shouted, pointing uphill. “The mountain!” Another frightful barrage of Mage Fire had dissolved half the peak above their heads. The remaining rock and stone gave a rumbling shriek and collapsed, sending a wall of dirt, stone, and wood rushing towards them.</p>
<p>“Hold tight, little one,” Kieran whispered. Lillis tightened her arms around his neck, pressing so close that her kitten, Snowfoot, mewed a protest and squirmed in the sling tied round her neck. Kieran turned to raise both hands and she felt the electric tingle of his gathering magic. It danced across her skin like crackling sparks of green light. Inside her, Lillis’s own magic rose in response.</p>
<p>She squeezed her eyes shut and pressed her face to his throat. <em>Bright Lord, please help Kieran</em>, she prayed.<em> I don’t want to him to die. Or Papa, Lorelle, Kiel, or me either. </em></p>
<p>She felt the vibrations of Kieran’s throat against her lips as he shouted defiantly and flung out his weaves. The magic left him—and her too—in a great rush. <em>Please, gods, please gods, please, gods.</em></p>
<p>Incredibly—or, perhaps, miraculously—the crumbling mountainside froze. Lillis risked a glance up to confirm that they were not about to be crushed flat as a griddle cake, then squeezed her eyes shut again.</p>
<p>“Five-fold weaves, my brothers!” Kieran shouted. “Keep that scorching Mage Fire off us!” Suddenly, he gave a grunt of pain, and Lillis felt him falter. Her head lifted, and though the battle raging all around terrified her, she forced her eyes open.</p>
<p>Kieran was arrow-shot. The sight of the ugly black, barbed metal arrow puncturing his thigh made her belly lurch.</p>
<p><em>**Get down, Lillis,**</em> his voice murmured in her mind. <em>**Run to your father. Kiel and I will hold them off.**</em></p>
<p><em>**But what about you?**</em> It was the first time she’d ever spoken to him mind-to-mind. <em>**You’re coming too, aren’t you?**</em></p>
<p><em>**In a chime …once Kiel and I deal with these Eld rultsharts.**</em> From a face too handsome to be mortal, his normally laughing blue eyes regarded her with unsettling solemnity, and then she knew what he would not say. He turned his head to press a kiss to her face, then another to the thin arms wrapped so tight around his neck, and though he did not release his hands from his weave, she felt the tug of Spirit fingers prying her grip loose. She fought to cling, but her childish muscles were no match for his magic. Her hold on him lost, she slid to the ground. <em>**Go, kitling. Quickly.**</em> Another nudge from invisible hands shoved her towards Papa.</p>
<p>“Master Baristani,” Kieran cried aloud to her father, “take the girls. Go with the <em>shei’dalins</em> into the Mists! Run!”</p>
<p>Clutching Snowfoot to her chest, Lillis stumbled across the uneven ground towards Papa’s outstretched arms and the small knot of scarlet-gowned healers.  Before she reached them, a darting flash of darkness caught her eye and a foul odor filled the air. She turned to find a <em>darrokken</em> rushing towards her, its red eyes glowing like the Dark Lord’s flames, venomous saliva dripping from its yellowed fangs. All over the foul wolflike creature’s scaly back, sores oozed green, odorous slime. She turned to run, but her foot caught between two rocks and she went down. Snowfoot still clutched to her chest, she hit the ground hard.  Knees and elbows took a nasty crack, and she bit her lip so hard her mouth filled with the salty, metallic tang of blood. She jumped to her feet, but pain shot out from her ankle, radiating halfway up her shin. With a cry, she fell down again just as the <em>darrokken</em> lunged.</p>
<p>One of the Fey warriors made a sprinting leap towards her, and scarlet-hilted Fey’cha daggers flew from his hands. The razor-sharp blades cut through the monster’s tough, leathery hide, and the <em>darrokken</em> dropped dead in its tracks.</p>
<p>“I’ve got you.” The warrior who’d killed the <em>darrokken</em> reached for her arm, but before he could grab hold, another of the monstrous beasts was upon him. Its fangs sank into his leg, and the Fey toppled, rolling over as he fell and landing with unsheathed blades in his hands. “Run, child,” he cried.</p>
<p>Those were the warrior’s last words. He bared his teeth in a snarl and plunged his red Fey’cha into the vulnerable belly of the beast just as the monster snapped its sharp yellow fangs around the warrior’s throat and ripped. Blood sprayed across Lillis’s face in a hot, red rain. Fey and beast died together, fighting, tearing, and slashing until the last breath of life left their bodies.</p>
<p>“<em>Lillis! Get up! Run!</em>” Kiel cried. His blue eyes were filled with fear, his blond hair spattered with dirt and blood. Two black arrows stuck out of his shoulder like grotesque spines. “Run for the Mists. Lorelle, Master Baristani—go!”</p>
<p>One of the <em>shei’dalins</em> in their party rushed forward to grab Lillis. A rapid healing weave spun out in golden-tinted waves of color, and the pain in her ankle subsided. The woman helped Lillis to her feet while another took Lorelle’s hand and began to run towards the shifting, sparkling clouds that guarded the Fading Lands. More <em>darrokken</em> rushed up the mountainside and dove into the middle of the small group. Lillis shrieked as the monstrous wolf-beasts slaughtered half a dozen more Fey and drove three of the <em>shei’dalins</em> back down the mountain towards the waiting Eld.</p>
<p>When she reached the edge of the Mists, Lillis turned back to watch the battle below. The remaining warriors guarding their escape were falling fast to the ferocious maws of the <em>darrokken</em>, while the Mages continued bombarding the mountainside with their devastating magic. A tide of Fey warriors burst from the Mists-filled pass of the Garreval and raced across the ground at lightning speed, swords flashing silvery bright in the sunlight.</p>
<p>Black Eld arrows turned day to night, and hundreds of Fey went down. Kieran fell with them.</p>
<p>“Kieran!” Lillis shrieked as she watched him fall. <em>“Kieran!”</em> She started to rush towards him, but the <em>shei’dalin</em> grabbed her and held her fast.</p>
<p>“<em>Nei</em>,” the veiled woman whispered. “You cannot go to him. He would not want it. He dies so you may live.”</p>
<p>With unexpected strength, the <em>shei’dalin</em> shoved Lillis towards the shifting radiance of the Faering Mists. “Quickly, into the Mists. It’s our only chance.”</p>
<p>Lillis struggled against her hold, squirming and flailing as the tears poured down her face. She screamed Kieran’s name again and again as the <em>shei’dalin</em> dragged her away. Before they’d gone more than a few steps, the mountain gave a groaning rumble that escalated to a deafening roar.</p>
<p>Kieran’s Earth weave collapsed and the entire mountaintop caved in, sending shards of shattered rocks, splintered trees, and a wave of earth crashing towards the valley below. The ground beneath Lillis’s feet fell away, and with a wail she toppled back into the shining white abyss of the Faering Mists.</p>
<p>Her last sight was of Kieran, screaming defiance as the avalanche enveloped him.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Chapter One</p>
<p>Fading Lands, Faering Mists.<br />
Fey warrior, champion of Light.<br />
Fading Lands, Faering Mists.<br />
Leading a never-ending Fight.</p>
<p>Tairen Soul: Singing, soaring high.<br />
Tairen Soul: Thundering, roaring cry.</p>
<p>Fading Lands, Faering Mists.<br />
Fey warrior, fiercest of Fey.<br />
Fading Lands, Faering Mists.<br />
Alone, leading the way.</p>
<p>~ Fiercest of Fey, by Corvan Lief, Celierian Poet</p>
<p>Celieria ~ Orest</p>
<p>Two weeks later</p>
<p>Ellysetta Baristani plunged her hands into the gaping cavity of the dying boy’s chest. Her fingers closed around his heart, pumping the still chambers with desperate force as a blaze of powerful, golden-white magic poured from her soul into his.</p>
<p>The fading brightness of his life force tasted warm and tart on her tongue, like a sun-ripened peach plucked too soon from the tree. So young. So innocent. He couldn’t have been more than fourteen. Too young for this. Too young for war. Too young to die.</p>
<p>Just like her sisters, Lillis and Lorelle, who’d been lost in the Faering Mists during the battle of Teleon.</p>
<p>“Please, my lady. Save him. Please, save my Aartys. He’s all I’ve got left.” The mother of the dying child stood sobbing beside the table, her eyes swollen and red rimmed, chapped hands twisting the hem of the blood-soaked apron tied around her waist. Her desperation and grief-induced terror pounded at Ellysetta’s empathic senses like hammer blows.</p>
<p>Not that a few more hammer blows made much difference in the emotional din swirling around the scarlet healing tents that had been erected on the mist- and rainbow-filled plazas of Upper Orest. As always when a battle raged nearby, the sheer numbers of wounded and dying warriors made it impossible for the dozen scarlet-veiled <em>shei’dalin </em>healers to weave peace upon them all. Not even the roar of the great Kiyera’s Veil waterfalls could drown out the screams of pain and pleas for mercy.</p>
<p>“I’ll do my best, Jonna,” Ellysetta vowed. She wanted to promise to save Aartys, but the last weeks here on Celieria’s war-torn northern border had taught her too well. Death, once a stranger, had become an all-too-familiar acquaintance.</p>
<p>Ellysetta looked up and met Jonna’s eyes over the boy’s limp body. The weeping mortal woman was one of the hearth witches who tended the wounded and dying. She knew death as intimately as Ellysetta now did, but that didn’t stop her from fighting against it with every ounce of strength she possessed—or from begging for a salvation she knew was beyond the capabilities of all mortal healers …and all but one of the Fey <em>shei’dalins</em>.</p>
<p>Ellysetta bit her lip. Aartys shouldn’t be here on her table—and she couldn’t help feeling partly to blame. After all, if not for her, the Fey might never have engaged their ancient enemy in this new Mage War. If not for Ellysetta, her truemate, Rainier vel’En Daris, would never have blown his golden horn this morning to call his Fey warriors and the mortal men of Orest to battle. And if he’d never blown that blast, the sound would never have spurred Jonna’s young son to snatch up his dead father’s sword and rush to fight alongside the men of Orest and his heroes, the immortal Shining Folk of the Fading Lands.</p>
<p>Yet those things <em>had</em> happened. And now, here they were, a child maimed and dying, his mother weeping and pleading for his life, both utterly dependent on Ellysetta and her magic to snatch his life from the jaws of death.</p>
<p>“Hold his hand, Jonna,” Ellysetta commanded. “Feed him your strength. Call to him. Don’t stop until I tell you.” And then, though she shouldn’t have vowed it, she did: “If there’s any way to save Aartys, I will.”</p>
<p>“Oh, my lady.” Jonna’s lips trembled and tears flooded her eyes. “Oh, thank you, my lady. <em>Thank you</em>.”</p>
<p>She started to come around the table, but Ellysetta stopped her. “Hold his hand, Jonna.” The command came out more curtly than usual. She didn’t want this woman kneeling at her feet, kissing her hem as other Celierians had done when pleading for her to save a loved one. She wasn’t a goddess to be worshiped.</p>
<p>“<em>Teska,</em> Jonna. Please,” she urged more gently. “Hold your son’s hand. There isn’t much time.” And because there truly wasn’t, she infused the words with a spider-silk-thin filament of compulsion, woven from shining lavender Spirit magic.</p>
<p>Jonna instantly snatched up her son’s hand.</p>
<p>“And pray, my friend,” Ellysetta said, adding silently, <em>For all our sakes</em>.</p>
<p>The words to the Bright Lord’s devotion tumbled from the mortal healer’s lips.</p>
<p>Ellysetta flicked a glance at the tall, grim Fey warrior standing near the corner of her healing table.</p>
<p>Without a word, Gaelen vel Serranis stepped forward to lay a hand upon her shoulder. Crackling energy flooded her veins as the most infamous of the five bloodsworn warriors of her quintet surrendered his immense power for her use. The sort of healing she was about to do would take more than her own vast stores of power, and though usually a <em>shei’dalin</em> would rely on her truemate to supplement her strength, Rain was on the battlefield, where the king of the Fey belonged, rather than at her side.</p>
<p>Ellysetta closed her eyes, shut out the world, and gathered her magic. Power came to her call, a dazzling golden-white brightness the Fey called <em>shei’dalin’</em>s<em> love</em>, a healing gift Ellysetta Baristani wielded with a strength the world had not seen since the dawn of the First Age.</p>
<p>Against her closed lids, the pulsating vibrancy of Fey vision replaced physical sight, darkness teeming with the glowing threads of energy that made up all life and substance. Her consciousness traveled down the blinding-bright conduits of her arms, into Aartys’s dying body, then sank deeper. Moving with swift purpose, she followed the threads of her healing weave and descended into the Well of Souls, the blackness that lay beyond and beneath the physical world, the home of demons and the unborn and the dead waiting for passage into their next life.</p>
<p>There, she could see the fading light of Aartys’s soul as he sank into the long, silent dark of the Well. When his light disappeared, he would be lost. Determined not to let that happen, she plunged after him, her presence a dazzling incandescence that lit the shadowy world of the Well like a golden-white sun.</p>
<p><em>**Aartys.**</em> She wove Spirit, the mystic magic of thought and illusion, hoping to make him feel his mother’s grief and fill him with an urgent need to return to her. <em>**Fight, Aartys. Fight to live.** </em>Death, ultimately, was like drowning. Once the initial terror passed, the dying embraced the numbness and simply let themselves fall, like wrecked ships sinking to the bottom of the sea. <em>**Do not surrender. Reach for my Light. Let me bring you back to your mother. She needs you. She will be lost without you.**</em></p>
<p>Her weave was strong, her command of Spirit as exceptional as her command of the potent healing magic of the Fey. Yet still he fell.</p>
<p><em>So tired</em>, his fading spirit whispered. <em>Tell Mam I</em> …His voice trailed off and the pale light of his soul began to sputter.</p>
<p><em>**Aartys!**</em> Ellysetta dove after him. The threads of her weave stretched to the breaking point as she followed him deep into the Well, deeper than any other healer dared to go, deeper than she should have gone without Rain to anchor her.</p>
<p><em>**Take my magic, kem’falla,**</em> Gaelen said. <em>**Use what you need, and quickly. You have been gone from yourself too long.**</em></p>
<p><em>**Aiyah.**</em> She seized the magic Gaelen had offered for her use—the dark black threads of magic that throbbed with red sparks. Azrahn, the forbidden soul magic.</p>
<p>Ellysetta worked quickly, reluctant to put Gaelen at risk by making him hold his weave for more than a chime or two. Though Gaelen considered the chance to save Fey lives well worth the risk of wielding Azrahn, they both knew how dangerous the magic was. She plaited the cool, dark threads of his Azrahn into her flows of <em>shei’dalin</em>’s<em> </em>love, weaving the strands of icy shadow and warm, healing light together.</p>
<p>The new weave—amplified by her powers as well as Gaelen’s own—let her descend much farther into the Well. But as deep as she went, Aartys remained out of reach.</p>
<p><em>**Enough, kem’falla,**</em> Gaelen said. <em>**We’re out of time.** </em></p>
<p><em>**Just a little farther.** </em></p>
<p><em>**Nei</em>.<em> You’ve been gone from yourself too long. If you cannot save the boy now, you must let him go. Your life is too important to risk so needlessly.**</em></p>
<p>Anger bubbled up inside her. <em>**Needlessly?**</em></p>
<p><em>**You know what I mean.**</em></p>
<p><em>**Every life is precious, Gaelen.**</em> She’d held too many dying men in her arms, comforted too many stricken loved ones, seen her own mother beheaded by the Eld. She could not bear the thought of one more lost, wasted life—especially not this beautiful boy, whose bright eyes and sunny smile had reminded her of her own young sisters.</p>
<p><em>Nei</em>, she could not—<em>would not</em>—lose another soul today. Not to magic, not to war, and not to the thrice-flamed Well of Souls!</p>
<p>Cold whispered through her veins. Azrahn surged up from the great, deep source inside her, summoned by her anger. An almost sentient eagerness pressed against her will, as if the Azrahn inside her <em>wanted</em> her to weave it, <em>wanted</em> her to embrace its dark, forbidden power.</p>
<p>For her, giving in to that temptation would come with a terrible price. She bore four Mage Marks, placed upon her by the High Mage of Eld, and each time she spun Azrahn, she risked receiving another one. Two more and her soul, her consciousness, her entire being, would be his to command.</p>
<p>Still, the lure was tremendous. Gaelen’s threads didn’t contain a fraction of the power her own did. She could weave just a little …just enough to save the boy. Perhaps she could even spin it quickly enough that the High Mage wouldn’t have time to sense it and Mark her again.</p>
<p><em>Yes …yes, just a little, and quickly. Such a small thing. Surely he would miss it.</em></p>
<p>The siren’s call whispered in her ear. Dimly, she heard someone say her name, as if calling from far away, but the voice was soon was silenced. Forbidden power throbbed in her veins, and all around her, the darkness of the Well of Souls pulsed to the same beat. Her ears filled with muted susurrations, a rhythmic ebbing and flowing, as if she were a child in the womb, listening to the blood rushing through her mother’s veins. The sound was hypnotic …entrancing….</p>
<p>She reached for her Azrahn, let its cold sweetness fill her.</p>
<p><em>**Ellysetta!**</em> A furious and all-too-familiar voice roared her name. Power rushed into her body, and deep within the Well, her Light flared like an exploding sun.</p>
<p>The jolt sent her weave spearing wildly into the Well, so deep it passed the fading light that was Aartys’s soul. Stunned, she had just enough time and presence of mind to close her weave around Aartys and cling tight before her soul was yanked from the Well and slammed back into her own body.</p>
<p>The shining brilliance of Fey vision faded to darkness. The tranquillity of the Well gave way to a murmur of voices, muted screams of men in pain, the smells of blood and sweat and suffering. Her eyes fluttered as her senses gradually returned to her body.</p>
<p>She was clutched in a hot, hard, golden embrace, but neither that nor the blazing heat of two burning purple suns glaring down upon her could stop the icy shivers racking her frame. She blinked up into the achingly beautiful, utterly furious face of her truemate.</p>
<p>“Rain, I—”</p>
<p>His eyes flared tairen-bright. Pupils and whites disappeared, leaving only spark-filled whirls of lavender that glowed so bright they could have lit a dark room. “Do. Not. Speak.” His nostrils flared, and even the long, inky black strands of his hair crackled with scarcely contained energy. “Just …be silent.” He was so angry, his temper bordered on Rage, the wild, ferociously lethal fury of the Fey.</p>
<p>A choked sound snagged her attention. “Aartys!” she cried.</p>
<p>Powerful arms encased in heavy, golden, tairen-forged steel tightened their grip around her and held her fast. “Is alive and does not need your help.”</p>
<p>She turned her head, but she couldn’t see the boy. Scarlet-veiled <em>shei’dalins</em> surrounded the table where he lay, and the glow of concentrated healing magic shone so bright even mortal eyes could see it.</p>
<p><em>“Beylah sallan,”</em> she breathed. Thank the gods.</p>
<p>That remark was the feather that broke the tairen’s back. Rain plunked her on her feet, gripped her arms, and gave her a shake strong enough to rattle her teeth. “Thank the gods? <em>Thank the gods?</em>” His Rage blazed so hot, flames nearly shot from his head. “Thank Gaelen for having the belated sense to call me when he realized what was happening.” He shook her again. “Idiot! Ninnywit! Reckless, rock-headed dim-skull! How many times are you going to put yourself in such danger?”</p>
<p>Her brows snapped together. “Me?” she shot back. “That’s a bit of the sword calling the dagger sharp, don’t you think?” She yanked herself out of his grasp and returned his glare with her own. “Do I berate you for all the risks you take in battle?”</p>
<p>He drew himself up to his full height, and with his golden war steel adding significant breadth to his already broad shoulders, he loomed over her. “Don’t try to turn this on me. I am the Defender of the Fey, and we are at war. It is my duty to lead our warriors in battle.”</p>
<p>“And I am a <em>shei’dalin</em>,” she retorted. “The most powerful healer we have. It is my duty to save every life I can!”</p>
<p>“Not at the risk of your own! You were about to weave Azrahn, Ellysetta! Despite the danger—despite your sworn oath never to weave it again unless we both agreed.”</p>
<p>The pain in his voice—even more than the frightening truth of his words—deflated her defensive ire. She had made a vow and nearly betrayed it—nearly betrayed him. Her shoulders slumped and she lifted a shaking hand to her face.</p>
<p>He was right, but before she could admit it and apologize, Jonna gave a short cry. Rain and Ellysetta both turned to the table where Aartys lay. The <em>shei’dalins</em> had extinguished their weaves and were already departing. The boy was sitting up, the gaping wound in his chest gone without a trace, even the dried blood and grime of war washed away by <em>shei’dalin</em> magic. His mother had her arms wrapped tight around him, and her shoulders heaved with sobs of relief and joy.</p>
<p>“Thank you.” Jonna wept, tears raining from her eyes. “Thank you for my son.  Light’s blessings upon you!”</p>
<p>Ellysetta found Rain’s hand. He’d removed his gauntlets, and her fingers curled into the broad, warm strength of his.</p>
<p>His eyes flashed a warning at her, but to Jonna he offered only gentle understanding. “<em>Sha vel’mei</em>, Jonna,” he said, his voice a deep, rough velvet purr. “You are both welcome. And you, Aartys . . .” He leveled a stern look on the boy. “I do not want to see you on the battlefield again. Your sword is sharp and your soul is brave, but I need you most here, guarding your mother and the Feyreisa.” He clapped a hand on the child’s shoulder. “There is no more honorable duty for a warrior of the Fey than to protect our women. Do you accept this great honor?”</p>
<p>“You want me to help guard the Feyreisa?” The boy’s eyes went big as coins. He cast a dazed glance at Ellysetta before turning back to Rain. “Aye, my lord Feyreisen,” he agreed. “I do accept.”</p>
<p>“<em>Kabei</em>.” Good. “Then it is decided. Sers vel Jelani and vel Tibboreh”—he tilted his head towards two of the grim-eyed Fey posted at the corners of Ellysetta’s healing tent—“will explain your duties to you. For now, go with your mother and get some rest and a change of clothes.”</p>
<p>“But the Feyreisa—” Aartys began.</p>
<p>“—will not need your protection at the moment, as she will be coming with me.”</p>
<p>* * *</p>
<p>Eld ~ Boura Fell</p>
<p>Vadim Maur, the High Mage of Eld, shook off the flicker of awareness that had brushed across his senses and withdrew the part of his consciousness he’d sent into the Well. If the brief touch had been the girl, she was gone now, and the protections that barred him from her mind were firmly back in place. He could still sense her existence, but that was all.</p>
<p>“Master?” The timid, subservient voice near his left shoulder broke the silence. “What should I do with him?”</p>
<p>Vadim tightened his lips in irritation, then just as quickly relaxed the pressure when he felt the flesh split and warm liquid ooze down his shrouded chin. Wordless, he dabbed the edge of his deep purple hood against his mouth. His body had grown fragile these past weeks. The Rot had him firmly in its grip, and not even the ministrations of his powerful <em>shei’dalin</em> captives could hold it back any longer. Soon, the truth already suspected by most of his council would be impossible to hide.</p>
<p>His time was running out.</p>
<p>He gazed through the observation portal into the <em>sel’dor</em> cage with its wild-eyed inhabitant: a young man, the last of the four magically gifted infants to whom he’d tied the souls of unborn tairen seventeen years ago. The boy had shown full mastery in four of the five Fey magics, but only a middling level three in Spirit, so there’d never been any possibility of his becoming a Tairen Soul capable of summoning the Change. But his bloodlines were strong, and he’d proven quite adept at wielding Azrahn even in early childhood.</p>
<p>Vadim had been using him as a breeder, but recently, with the Rot advancing through Vadim’s flesh and Ellysetta Baristani still so stubbornly elusive, he had seriously considered using the boy as the vessel to house the next incarnation of his soul. At least as a stopgap until the much more powerful Ellysetta finally found her way back into his keeping.</p>
<p>That plan was scuttled now. The boy had gone mad, just like the thousands of others to whom Vadim had grafted tairens’ souls over the centuries. The madness usually began after adolescence, starting with voices only the afflicted could hear, then progressing to bouts of Rage, and finally complete savagery and destructive madness and death.</p>
<p>Of all the children to whom he’d bound the soul of a tairen, only Ellysetta had survived twenty-four years without a hint of insanity. That made her an invaluable prize, not only as a powerful vessel to hold Vadim’s incarnated soul, but as the key to his long centuries of experimentation. .</p>
<p>In the cell, the boy put his hands to his head. Shrieking unintelligible gibberish, he pulled great tufts of hair out by the roots and spun around the room, slamming his body against the wall and ripping at his own flesh.</p>
<p>Vadim’s fingers curled in a fist. “Restrain him before he damages himself more. Continue to breed him as long as you can.” Too many centuries had gone into the crossbreeding of magical bloodlines to throw the boy away without squeezing as much benefit from his existence as possible. “If he endangers the females, send him to Fezai Madia.” The leader of the Feraz witches had been complaining lately over the quality of the slaves he’d been sending for her sacrifices to the demon-god Gamorraz. Insane this boy might be, but there was no denying the strong magic in his blood.</p>
<p>Leaving the observation room, he passed through the nursery and paused to glance into the two cradles resting against the wall. Two infants with bright, shining eyes stared up at him. Both boys, both already showing promise of mastering all Fey magics. Each had the soul of an unborn tairen grafted to his own. Would they go mad, too? Or had Vadim finally discovered the secret to successfully breeding Tairen Souls of his own?</p>
<p>Only time would tell. For now, they represented another generation of possibility, another opportunity to succeed in case Ellysetta Baristani continued to elude him …</p>
<p>…or in case she fell prey to the same lethal insanity as her predecessors.</p>
<p>* * *</p>
<p>Celieria ~ Orest</p>
<p>“Where are we going?” Ellysetta asked as Rain dragged her away from the healing tents. Her quintet had started to follow, but one hot look from Rain had stopped them in their tracks.</p>
<p>“Someplace I can keep you out of trouble.”</p>
<p>There was still a snap in his voice, so she offered a small peace offering. “You were good with Aartys.”</p>
<p>He gave her a withering look, and her olive branch went quietly up in flames. “Do not attempt to soothe this tairen, <em>shei’tani</em>. You nearly died—or worse—and I will not overlook that.”</p>
<p>She bit her lip. He was right. She’d gone too far into the Well, and <em>something</em> had been quite successfully pushing her to use her most dangerous magic. Still …this double standard her truemate imposed on her had gone on long enough.</p>
<p>“Why do you get to be angry, and I do not?”</p>
<p>He glared. “What do <em>you</em> have to be angry about?”</p>
<p>She stopped stock-still and yanked her hand from his grip. “Are you serious? I’m your <em>shei’tani</em>—your truemate—and you can actually ask me that?” She didn’t wait for him to reply. “How many times have you barely made it back to Orest alive? How many times have you crashed into Veil Lake, bloody and half-dead, limbs broken, flesh shredded, enough <em>sel’dor</em> arrows in you to supply an entire company of archers? Yet you expect me to patch you up and send you back to battle time and time again. You and every other warrior who ends up on my table.”</p>
<p>“You are a <em>shei’dalin</em>. That is what <em>shei’dalins</em> do.”</p>
<p>“Precisely! You fight out there.” She jabbed a finger towards the scorched and still-smoking southwest corner of Eld. “Well, <em>that</em> is my battlefield.” She turned and jabbed her finger back at the healing tents. “And I’m every bit as determined to win my war as you. If that means I occasionally have to take risks—just like you do—then, by the gods, that’s exactly what I’ll do!”</p>
<p>“Over. My. Rotting. Corpse.” His teeth snapped together with an audible click. He grabbed her wrist again and put on a burst of speed that forced her to jog to keep up with him.</p>
<p>The collection of bloodsworn black Fey’cha daggers strapped across her chest and around her hips slapped against her steel-embroidered scarlet robes as she ran, and the feeling of being a chastised child dragged along beind an irate parent only chafed her more.</p>
<p>“You’re being unfair!” she exclaimed. “I may not have my wings yet, but I’m a Tairen Soul, too, Rain. I feel the same need to defend our people as you do. Just because the only enemy I can defend them against at the moment is death, that doesn’t mean my efforts are any less vital than yours!”</p>
<p>His eyes glowed so bright they nearly shot purple sparks. “Have I ever suggested they were? Have I not let Gaelen weave the forbidden magic for your use so you could save lives that would otherwise be lost? I do not object to your saving lives. But I will not allow you to risk your own in the process!”</p>
<p>“But—”</p>
<p><em>“Enough!</em>” he thundered. “You don’t have to like it, Ellysetta, but I am the Feyreisen—both your truemate and your king—<em>and on this matter, I will be obeyed!</em>”</p>
<p>Ahead lay the open plaza near Veil Lake that Rain and the tairen used for launching and landing. Four majestic winged cats, each the size of a house, crouched on the manicured grass at the lakeshore. Their heads were extended as they lapped at the cold waters fed from Kiyera’s Veil, the gauntlet of three-hundred-foot waterfalls that tumbled down from opposing mountainsides at the lake’s western shore.</p>
<p>When they reached the plaza, Rain slowed his pace. Ellysetta yanked her wrist from his grip a second time, marched to the mossy edge of the bricked space, and presented him her back. She pressed her lips in a thin line, angry at his high-handedness. For a woman who’d spent the first twenty-four years of her life as the shy, obedient daughter of a poor woodcarver and his wife, Ellysetta had become mulishly resistant to Voices of Authority. Even when those voices belonged to kings, wedded husbands, and beloved truemates. If Mama were still alive, she would shake her head in despair of her adopted daughter’s willful ways.</p>
<p>By the lakeshore, the largest of the tairen, a great white beauty with eyes like glowing blue jewels, lifted her snowy, feline head and turned to pad towards them. Her long tail slapped against several tree trunks as she walked, bringing a shower of leaves raining down in her wake. When she reached the plaza, she spread her wide, clawed wings and reared up on her hind legs to shake the debris from her fur. A deep, throaty purr rumbled in her chest, and she tilted her head down to pin Ellysetta with a whirling, pupillesss blue gaze.</p>
<p><em>**You worried your mate, kitling,**</em> admonished Steli, <em>chakai</em> of the Fey’Bahren pride. The musical tones of the tairen’s speech danced in the air like flashes of silver and gold and carried with them feelings of panicked fear and images of Rain whirling in the sky and rocketing towards Upper Orest. <em>**You should not alarm him so. Tairen frightened for their mates are dangerous—especially to beings as breakable as mortals.**</em></p>
<p>“Not you, too, Steli!” Ellysetta crossed her arms, feeling immensely put out. “You think I’m not afraid when he’s out there getting maimed by arrows and bowcannon?”</p>
<p>Steli’s ears flicked and her tail lashed the earth. <em>**Ellysetta-kitling would not scorch the world. Rainier-Eras already has. Without you to anchor him, he would again.**</em></p>
<p>That simple, inescapable truth deflated Ellysetta’s temper as nothing else could. A thousand years ago, after the death of his first mate, Sariel, Rain Tairen Soul had scorched the world in the blaze of tairen flame, killing thousands in mere instants, millions in a handful of days. He’d paid for that act of Rage with seven hundred years of madness and another three centuries spent battling his way back from the abyss.</p>
<p><em>**Rainier-Eras is proud,**</em> Steli continued, <em>**and he does not wish to frighten his mate. He does not tell Ellysetta-kitling that each day becomes harder. That each battle weakens what took him so long to rebuild.**</em></p>
<p>Ellysetta cast a troubled gaze over her shoulder. Rain stood a short distance away, shoulders hunched, pinching the bridge of his nose as he expended visible effort to calm himself. She’d frightened him badly, and his control hung in tatters. Untruemated Fey warriors absorbed the torment of every life they took—the pain, the darkness, the sorrow of lost dreams hanging like burning stones around their necks—and Rain bore the weight of millions on his soul. Mental and emotional discipline was the only thing standing between him and insanity, and her nearly fatal trip into the Well had stripped those protections threadbare. Shame washed over her.</p>
<p>The tairen bent her head and nudged Ellysetta. <em>**Go to your mate, kitling. He needs you. Now more than ever.**</em></p>
<p>Ellysetta crossed the short distance to Rain’s side. Moss grew green and thick along the edges of the plaza’s mist-dampened bricks. Winter would be upon them soon, and the spray off the Veil would turn to flurries of ice crystals. The nights would grow longer, the Eld Mages more powerful. Despite the brave efforts of Lord Teleos’s soldiers, Celieria stood no chance of surviving the winter as a free land without the help of the Fey. The might of the tairen was the only power Mages truly feared.</p>
<p>Until Ellysetta found her wings, Rain was the only living Tairen Soul capable of Changing to his tairen form and leading the pride into battle. As such, he would have to fight—again and again and again—and the torment of his soul would grow more unbearable with each engagement. Ellysetta hadn’t been thinking about that when she’d made her decision to save Aartys. She hadn’t been thinking about Rain at all.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry, <em>shei’tan</em>,” she apologized sincerely. “I should have been more careful—for your sake if not my own.”</p>
<p>“That’s what you always say,” he replied in a low voice, “but it never stops you from doing what you know you should not.”</p>
<p>She rubbed her forehead, where a headache had begun to throb. “I never meant to go so deep into the Well, but he was a child, Rain. Not much older than Lillis and Lorelle. I couldn’t let him die. Can’t you understand that?”</p>
<p>He sighed. “I do understand, <em>shei’tani</em>. Better than you think.” He turned to face her. “But saving that boy or even a thousand more like him won’t bring Lillis and Lorelle back.” He crossed to her side and took her shoulders in a firm grip. “You’ve got to stop risking yourself this way, Ellysetta. You’re no good to your sisters, or your father, or anyone else for that matter, if you’re dead or lose your soul to the Mages.”</p>
<p>“I know that. I do. It’s just that—” Her voice broke off. She could feel his fear, his love, his guilt for bringing her into the dangers of a Tairen Soul’s life, his terror that he might not be strong enough to hold himself in check the next time she came so close to death.</p>
<p>“Oh, Rain.” She leaned against him, resting her forehead against the unforgiving golden steel of his tairen-forged war armor and laying the palm of one hand against the smooth warmth of his jaw. Though they could not read each other’s thoughts until their bond was complete, they could, when they touched skin-to-skin, feel each other’s emotions as clear as day.</p>
<p>Because he was the strongest of the Fey, the most powerful Tairen Soul in living memory, it was so easy to forget how fragile he truly was, how narrow the band that kept him from plunging into madness.</p>
<p><em>**Sieks’ta, shei’tan.**</em> I’m sorry, beloved. She wove the apology into his mind on a thread of Spirit, not reading his thoughts, but offering him one of hers. With her hand against his face, her skin touching his, she knew he could sense her sincerity and the great love she bore him just as she sensed his agitation drain away, replaced by regret and weariness.</p>
<p>He turned his lips into her palm and pressed a kiss there. “As am I,” he said. “I know my fear for you is a burden, and it shames me that you must bear it. You are a Tairen Soul, which means you are fierce, born to fight and to defend those in your care; but you are also my <em>shei’tani</em>. I thought I would be strong enough to let you embrace the warrior’s side of your nature. I know now I’m not. I cannot allow you to be harmed—not even by your own actions.”</p>
<p>Ellysetta forced a small smile. “Perhaps when our bond is complete, things will be different.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” he agreed without conviction.</p>
<p>Steli’s wings flapped. The white tairen nudged them with her nose. <em>**Time to fly, Rainier-Eras. The day grows late.**</em></p>
<p><em>“Aiyah.”</em></p>
<p>“Where are we going?” Ellysetta asked.</p>
<p>“Crystal Lake,” he admitted.</p>
<p>“The Source in the mountains? But that’s bells away—” She broke off and her brows drew together in concern. Every great city in the Fading Lands had a Source at its center, and the Fey drank the water of those Sources to bolster their strength and replenish flagging magical energies. The only Source that existed outside the Fading Lands was Crystal Lake, and its magic-infused waters fed one of the tributaries that flowed into Kiyera’s Veil and the Heras River.</p>
<p>If the diluted Source waters of the Veil were no longer powerful enough to replenish Rain’s magic or rejuvenate his strength . . .</p>
<p>“It’s more precaution than need,” Rain reassured her, reading her expression. Fey didn’t lie, which meant he was telling the truth—or at least a version of it. “Besides, how long has it been since we’ve managed to do more than snatch a few bells’ sleep together? I thought you might like some time away from the battlefield and the healing tents.”</p>
<p>“I would.” The other <em>shei’dalins</em> slipped back through the Mists every few days to restore themselves in the peace of the Fading Lands. Banished and Mage Marked as she was, Ellysetta didn’t have that luxury. “I suppose we could both use a visit to the Source,” she said, stepping back to give Rain room for the Change.</p>
<p>He waited for her to get clear before closing his eyes and summoning his magic. Flows of power gathered and swirled around him, darkening to a gray mist that sparkled with rainbow lights. The crackling energy of his magic poured over Ellysetta in hot, electric waves. She gasped and closed her eyes on a shudder of shared pleasure as Rain’s Fey body was unmade—his flesh and consciousness flung out into the mist of the Change—then re-formed in a staggering rush into the great, sleek body of his tairen self.</p>
<p>When the magic of the Change cleared, Rain Tairen Soul crouched where Rain the Fey had stood: a magnificent, kingly creature, like one of the sleek black jungle cats Ellysetta had seen in illustrated books of faraway lands, except that a tairen stood easily half as high as a fully grown fireoak, and great, batlike wings sprouted from his back. Even by tairen standards, Rain was an impressive male, with fur a glossy, unrelieved midnight black, a vast wingspan, and radiant, pupillesss eyes that glowed like lavender suns.</p>
<p>He lowered his head to pin Ellysetta with that bright, whirling gaze and rumbled a throaty purr. Her body clenched like a fist, every nerve abruptly sizzling with a rush of pure, primitive heat. She might not yet have found her wings, but the tairen in her soul recognized its mate—and yearned for him with staggering force.</p>
<p>She wet her lips and tried to compose herself while Rain purred deep in his throat and nosed her with unmistakable interest. “Stop that.” She laughed, giving him a shove. She summoned an Earth weave that transformed her gown into steel-studded scarlet leathers, with Fey’cha belts crossed over her chest and her quintet’s daggers sheathed in the belt slung around her hips. A subsequent weave summoned a burst of powerful silvery Air magic that lifted her body up and deposited her into the cradle of the leather saddle that Rain wove for her on his back. She anchored herself in place with the saddle’s leather straps. “I’m ready.”</p>
<p><em>**Then spin the weave, shei’tani. Around Steli as well as us.**</em></p>
<p>Ellysetta nodded and reached once more into the well of power that lay within her. Lavender Spirit, the mystic magic of consciousness, thought, and illusion, surged up in a rush and she wove the dense threads of energy in a pattern Gaelen vel Serranis had taught the Fey only a few months ago. She flung the weave out like a net, first around Steli—who promptly winked out of sight—then around herself and Rain, rendering them invisible to both mortal and magic eyes.</p>
<p>The other tairen had left the waters of Veil Lake and padded over to the plaza. They leapt into the air seconds before Rain crouched down on his haunches and sprang skyward, and their presence provided cover for the rush of wind that might have betrayed Rain and Steli’s otherwise invisible launch.</p>
<p>Ringed by the pride and sheathed by invisibility, Rain, Ellysetta, and Steli soared high over the Rhakis mountaintops into the thin, crisp chill of the autumn sky. A dusting of snow capped the high, jagged peaks to the north. Below, just across the Heras River, the southwest corner of Eld still smoldered from the fiery aftermath of the recent battle. What had two weeks ago been a fortified village was now a scorched plain, razed to the ground, every living and dead thing in a twenty-mile radius reduced to ash. Yet still, the Eld came to battle the legions of Orest with relentless determination, wearing them down bit by bit, retreating back into the dense forests of Eld, where, thanks to the batteries of bowcannon trained on the skies, not even the tairen could follow.</p>
<p>To the west, the billowing wall of mist that marked the borders of the Fading Lands rose up from the mountaintops. Rain flew close enough that Ellysetta could feel the tingle of magic from the Mists, and her fingers tightened on the pommel.</p>
<p>From the valley floor, the Mists looked like a line of thunderclouds hugging the crests of the Rhakis mountains. From the sky, however, they looked more beautiful than foreboding, like a radiant veil of shifting rainbows that stretched upward as far as the eye could see.</p>
<p>Ominous thunderheads or shimmering veil, Ellysetta recognized the Faering Mists for what they truly were: a deadly magical barrier meant to keep the enemies of the Fey from entering the Fading Lands.</p>
<p>It was true that many an innocent shepherd had wandered by accident into the Mists, only to emerge again, decades later, unharmed, not aged a day, carrying tales of being feted by the Fair Folk in misty forest palaces. To the not-so-innocent, the Mists were far less kind. Entire armies had been swallowed up, never to be seen again.</p>
<p>Ellysetta’s body tensed with remembered pain. She knew, firsthand, the torments that lay within those shifting clouds. Thanks to the four Mage Marks she bore, the Mists were now more dangerous to her than the Well of Souls, and the last time she’d entered, she’d very nearly not made it back out again alive.</p>
<p>If it were otherwise, she would not be here in Orest, weaving her magic to save lives. She would be in the Mists, searching every gods-cursed fingerspan of the magical barrier, tearing it apart thread by scorching thread if she had to.</p>
<p>Because somewhere in that veil of shifting mist, the last members of her family had been trapped; and she could not reach them …or even tell if they were still alive.</p>
<p>* * *</p>
<p>The Faering Mists</p>
<p>“Lorelle! Papa! Can you hear me? Where are you?” Lillis Baristani&#8217;s voice was hoarse from shouting, and the ocean of tears she&#8217;d shed had left her eyes swollen and burning.</p>
<p>She turned in circles and squinted in a vain effort to pierce the suffocating veil of shifting whiteness around her. She’d been in the Mists a long time—bells, certainly, maybe even a day or more, though it was hard to tell time when the vapor was eternally lit by its own magical glow. In any event, she’d not seen or heard another living being since the moment the mountain had shuddered like a wild, angry beast and she’d lost her footing and fallen back into the Faering Mists.</p>
<p>Never in all her life had she been so alone. Always, someone had been with her: her twin, Lorelle, or Mama or Papa or Ellie.</p>
<p>Alone was frightening. Almost more frightening than the terrible, monstrous <em>darrokken</em> or the evil Eld soldiers that had attacked Teleon. Almost more frightening than even the sight of Kieran screaming as he disappeared beneath an avalanche of dirt, rock, and toppling trees.</p>
<p>&#8220;Kieran?&#8221; she cried. &#8220;Kiel? Anybody?&#8221;</p>
<p>There was still no answer.</p>
<p>Lillis blinked back tears and clutched her small kitten to her chest. “They’re not coming, Snowfoot. I don’t think anyone’s coming.” In the sling tied around her neck, her black-and-white kitten mewed and squirmed and sank its tiny sharp claws into the wool jacket covering Lillis&#8217;s pinafore.</p>
<p>Papa had always told Lillis, “If ever you get lost, kitling, stay right where you are. Your mama and I will come to find you.” But Mama was dead—killed by the same evil people who had attacked Teleon—and Lillis had waited long enough in the white blindness of the Mists to know that either no one was still alive to find her or they were looking in the wrong place.</p>
<p>Either way, she couldn’t stay here.</p>
<p>She stroked Snowfoot&#8217;s soft fur and hummed a little song Ellie had always sung to Lillis and Lorelle when they were frightened or upset. The tune didn&#8217;t soothe Lillis like it did when Ellie sang it, but Snowfoot stopped his anxious mewing.</p>
<p>“I&#8217;ll bet you&#8217;re getting hungry and thirsty, aren&#8217;t you?” Lillis murmured to the kitten. “I know I am.” She wrapped her thin arms around the tiny feline, cuddling it closer and pressing her face to the soft fur at the top of its head. &#8220;Come on, Snowfoot,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Let&#8217;s go find Papa and Lorelle.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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		<title>OVERVIEW: King of Sword and Sky</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/overview-king-of-sword-and-sky/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/overview-king-of-sword-and-sky/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Oct 2010 19:00:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Excerpt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guests and Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grade A]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[King of Sword and Sky]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leisure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paranormal Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[September 2008]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Sometimes it amazes me the villains authors are able to write. I laugh and ask where they get their inspiration, how deep they have to dig. I mean, sometimes it&#8217;s spooky how evil these characters can be. The High Mage of Eld is one of those villains. He&#8217;s taken centuries to hatch his plans, to [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img style="float: left; width: 99px; height: 160px; margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px;" title="King of Sword and Sky" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960590.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="King of Sword and Sky" hspace="5" width="99" height="160" align="left" /></a>Sometimes it amazes me the villains authors are able to write. I  laugh and ask where they get their inspiration, how deep they have to  dig. I mean, sometimes it&#8217;s spooky how evil these characters can be.</p>
<p>The High Mage of Eld is one of those villains. He&#8217;s taken centuries  to hatch his plans, to gather an army darker than anything that&#8217;s ever  been seen, to finally put his plans into motion, when and where to  strike. This guy makes the devil look like a boy scout.</p>
<p>One of the best things in these books is when Rain takes flight in  his Tairen form. Whether it&#8217;s in anger needing to fly it off or to  impress Ellie or in battle, Ms. Wilson&#8217;s descriptions of him are simply  breathtaking. I want a tairen of my own!</p>
<p>Please read my review of <a title="King of Sword and Sky" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023004/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>King of Sword and Sky</em></a> and the excerpt following.</p>
<p>Sandy M&#8217;s review of <strong><a title="King of Sword and Sky" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank">King of Sword and Sky (Tairen Soul Series, Book 3)</a> </strong> by <a title="C.L. Wilson" href="http://www.clwilson.com/index.htm" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson</a><br />
<em>Fantasy Paranormal Romance published by Leisure 30 Sep 08</em></p>
<p>If you have not read this series of C.W. Wilson&#8217;s, you are missing out on some so spectacularly special.  Ms. Wilson weaves her brand of magic in the pages of this beautiful fantasy world of the Fading Lands where the Fey and the tairen live. Her characters of full of honor and dignity, heart and passion, and, of course, love.  The villainy she etches into her evil characters only causes you to root for the good of her hero and heroine to triumph.  And her imagination is simply amazing.  You just <em>have</em> to read this series!</p>
<p>In this book we finally get to the Fading Lands.  We&#8217;ve been reading about them and waiting for them since the first book.  But even before that we have to endure the Faering Mist with Rain, King of the Fey and the Tairen Soul, and Ellysetta, his truemate, daughter of a wood carver.  The Mist is a barrier around the Fading Lands to keep all within its borders safe from evil, especially the Mages of Eld, who are on the rise once again after being vanquished in the Mage Wars a thousand years ago.</p>
<p>Their entourage makes it through the Mist relatively unscathed &#8212; it&#8217;s Rain and Ellie who are delayed by their past that the Mist throws in their path, doubling their fears and vulnerabilities.  Coming together, however, they fight their way through so that Rain can ready his men for the war that is sure to break out with Eld and Ellie can begin her search for answers to save the tairen.</p>
<p>See the remainder of my <em>King of Sword and Sky</em> review <a title="Sandy M's King of Sword and Sky review" href="http://goodbadandunread.com/2008/10/07/review-king-of-sword-and-sky-tarien-soul-series-book-3-by-cl-wilson/" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>
<p><img title="purple_divider.jpg" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/thumbs/thumbs_purple_divider.jpg" alt="purple_divider.jpg" /></p>
<blockquote>
<p style="text-align: center;">Prologue</p>
<p>Eld ~ Boura Fell</p>
<p>“Two Primages and sixty of my Black Guard slaughtered, and yet somehow the pair of you survived.  While my prize escaped.”</p>
<p>In the lowest levels of Boura Fell, the subterranean fortress buried deep beneath the dark-forested heart of Eld, High Mage Vadim Maur paced the <em>sel’dor</em>-veined floor of a small, sconce-lit cell.  Before him, two battered and bruised men sat chained to a pair of black metal chairs.  One wore the blood-and-filth grimed remnants of an exorcist’s scarlet robes.  The other wore shredded and stained crimson rags that had once been the silken garb of a Sulimage, a journeyman practitioner of the vast and ancient arts of Magecraft.</p>
<p>Vadim Maur’s pacing came to an abrupt halt.  Luxuriant purple robes swirled about his spare form.  Long, bone-white hair slid across his shoulders, accentuating the pallor of a face that had not seen sunlight in a thousand years.  One beringed hand shot out.  Thin, cadaverous fingers closed around the swollen jaw of Kolis Manza, Eld’s most famous and esteemed Sulimage, who had until only a few days ago served his master Vadim Maur’s bidding in Celieria  City.</p>
<p>Now, the Sulimage’s sash had been stripped of its jewels of achievement, and the shredded, honor-bare swath of cloth had been tied around the man’s throat to mock his once-proud status as the High Mage’s most accomplished and magically gifted apprentice.</p>
<p>“Capture her,” Vadim hissed. “Bring her to me. That was my command.”  Long, ridged nails dug deep into the Sulimage’s skin.  “Yet you returned <em>empty handed</em>.”</p>
<p>“She was too powerful,” Kolis protested weakly.  “Not even the Primages could stand against her.”</p>
<p>“Powerful?”  Silver eyes snapped with fury, and white frost formed on every surface as the room’s temperature plunged in sharp response.  “Of course she was powerful!  She is the crowning achievement of my last thousand years of work!  The Tairen Soul I created!  My greatest triumph—<em>and you let her slip through your fingers!</em>”</p>
<p>“What more could I have done, master?  The Fey broke through our defenses.”  The Sulimage coughed, then groaned as his broken ribs protested.  “I tried to hold them off, to give the others time to get her into the Well, but then she… her magic…just exploded.  She surprised us all.”</p>
<p>“Silence!”  Vadim’s free hand shot out with vicious force.  Despite the High Mage’s great age and increasingly frail appearance, his fist smashed hard against his apprentice’s face.  The heavy rings of power decorating each of his fingers amplified the force of his blow, and the crack of bone and the crunch of breaking cartilage echoed off the stone walls of the chamber.  Blood sprayed from Kolis’s mouth and nose.  A groaning breath wheezed out of his lungs, and he slumped senseless in his bonds.</p>
<p>Vadim turned to the man in the ragged exorcist’s robes and whipped a wavy-edged Mage blade from the sheath strapped to his waist.  He snatched a handful of greasy brown hair and yanked hard, pulling back the prisoner’s head and exposing his throat to the dagger’s razor-sharp edge.</p>
<p>Pale blue eyes, surrounded by stubby black lashes, looked up at him in mute fear.  Fresh blood trickled from both nostrils and the corners of the man’s mouth, and vicious purpling bruises swelled on skin still mottled from earlier beatings.  A pulse beat like a trapped sparrow in the man’s throat, and his barrel chest rose and fell with short, rapid breaths.</p>
<p>The prisoner swallowed convulsively, and the skin of his neck pressed against the razor-sharp edge of the Mage blade.  Even that light touch tore a fresh slice in the captive’s skin.  No blood trickled from the wound.  The dagger’s thirsty black metal drank every drop before it spilled, and the dark cabochon stone in the blade’s pommel began to flicker with ravenous red lights.  The man froze in breathless silence.</p>
<p>Vadim’s mouth twisted in a snarl. “And you, butcher’s boy.  Did you seriously think for even the tiniest instant that your miserable, insignificant mortal life held any value to me except as a means to capture Ellysetta Baristani?”  Vadim leaned forward, letting his silver eyes turn to dark, bottomless wells of blackness sparkling with red lights as Azrahn, the sweet, powerful magic of the Mages, gathered within him.</p>
<p>Den Brodson, son of a Celierian butcher and former betrothed of Ellysetta Baristani, stared up into those twin pits of blackness and knew he was staring death in the face.  He’d seen death before, a few days ago in the Grand Cathedral of Light, when Rain Tairen Soul had pulled a Fey blade from its sheath and smiled into Den’s eyes.</p>
<p>Then, Den had turned and leaped into the Well of Souls to escape.  Now, gods help him, he had nowhere to go.</p>
<p>The white-haired High Mage leaned closer still.  “Your only value to me now is what small service the Guardians of the Well will offer in return for the delivery of your rotting corpse as a sacrifice.”</p>
<p>A mewling whimper broke from Den’s bloodied mouth.  He’d seen the Guardian’s handiwork…seen what they did to the dead and dying.  As long as he lived, he’d never forget the high-pitched, animal screams of Eld soldiers being eaten alive when fresh blood seeped through their bandages and drew the hunger-maddened demons like wounded creatures drew thistlewolves.</p>
<p>Gods, he didn’t want to die that way.  “Please…”</p>
<p>Black eyes sparked with a sudden flare of malevolent red.  The High Mage put a hand over Den’s chest, directly over his heart, the fingers curved like claws so that only the fingertips touched.  All five, pointed nails gouged into the skin as if the Mage intended to bore through Den’s chest bones and rip out his heart.  The black eyes whirled.  The skin where the pallid hand touched grew cold.</p>
<p>“No, wait! Wait!”  Panicked, Den shoved his feet against the cell floor and scooted his chair back, retreating from the icy hand.  The leg of his chair caught on an uneven stone and with a choked wail, he toppled over backwards.</p>
<p>Pain exploded in his skull as his head cracked against the stones.  His hands, shackled at the wrists, scraped hard against their metal bonds. The sudden jolt shook his entire body, and a long, narrow parcel of wadded cloth fell out of his robe’s deep pocket to land beside him.</p>
<p>The pair of pale, hulking guards standing near the door strode forward to grab Den’s chair and haul it—and him—back upright.   One guard kicked the small parcel, and sent it skittering across the floor.  The fabric unwrapped as it went, and a handful of long, crystal-topped needles spilled out, chiming an absurdly cheerful series of tinkling notes as they rolled across the stone floor.</p>
<p>The High Mage went still.  His eyes narrowed and lightened from nightmarish black to a slightly less terrifying shade of cold, glittering silver.  Sheathing his dagger, the Mage pointed to the scattered exorcism needles.  “Bring those to me,” he commanded.</p>
<p>Both guards rushed to obey, gathering up the fallen needles and bringing them back to their master.  The Mage examined them closely. Most of the dark crystals topping the needles were dark, but several sparkled with ruby lights.</p>
<p>His jaw clenched.  He spun around, grabbed Den’s chin in a fierce grip and shook him, making stars whirl across Den’s vision.  “These crystals have tasted blood,” the Mage hissed.  “Whose flesh did the needles pierce, mortal?  Yours?  Or someone else’s?”</p>
<p>Den swallowed the acrid bile rising in his throat.  “Ellie Baristani,” he groaned.  “She pulled them out to stop us from taking her into the Well.”</p>
<p>The High Mage released Den and straightened.  He lifted the needles to his nose and inhaled deeply.  His eyes fluttered closed.  When he opened them again, the Mage smiled.</p>
<p>“Well, mortal, it seems you will keep your miserable life another day, after all.”  He untied the sash from around his waist and wrapped the needles in it carefully, then deposited the small bundle in his own deep pocket.  “I do not punish those who please me, and this gift is pleasing indeed.”</p>
<p>The shallow, relieved breath had barely left Den’s lungs before his chest constricted on a new surge of panic when the High Mage lunged and his bony hand closed round Den’s throat.</p>
<p>“Today is my gift to you,” the Mage hissed.  “But for life after daybreak tomorrow, there is a price, mortal.”  He lifted the Mage blade, twisting the black, razored edge so the light of the sconces made shadows dance across the dark metal.   “Accept my Mark.  Willingly bind your soul to my service.  Or when the Great Sun rises, you will die a death more hideous than any you can imagine.”</p>
<p>Den whimpered.</p>
<p>The Mage smiled, pressed the point of his dagger to Den’s wrist and sliced.  Blood welled from the cut and slid down Den’s arm like scarlet teardrops.  The Mage lifted the wrist to his lips.  Den flinched as a pale tongue flicked out, tasting his blood.  “Answer me, boy.  Surrender your soul or die.  The choice is yours.&#8221;</p>
<p>Den’s hand shook.  His entire body trembled.  How had this happened?  How had his plans gone so awry?</p>
<p>The Mage’s grip tightened, pointed nails digging into the soft skin of Den’s inner wrist.  “Speak, mortal!  Do you accept my Mark?  Of your own free will, do you bind your soul to my service?”</p>
<p>Den’s dreams of living in luxury in some remote part of the world, growing fat on the profits of Ellie Baristani’s magic, shattered like broken glass.  There would be no palatial estate.  No soft-skinned, buxom serving wenches to tend his every need.  No lords lining up to seek his favor.  There would be no Ellie Baristani on her knees before him, kissing his feet and begging for his forgiveness, whoring herself to please him.</p>
<p>His eyes closed.  His shoulders heaved with helpless, silent sobs.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he whispered.</p>
<p>“Yes, master,” the Mage’s hissing voice corrected.</p>
<p>“Yes, master.”  Tears gathered in Den’s throat and burned at the back of his eyes.</p>
<p>“Then say it.  ‘Of my own free will, I accept your Mark and bind my soul to your eternal service.’”</p>
<p>Den heard himself, weeping brokenly, repeating the damning words.  Hot tears ran down his frozen cheeks. The cold press of the Mage’s mouth clamped against his wrist and pulled sickeningly as the Mage sucked Den’s blood from the sliced vein.  Then came the colder press of that taloned hand gripping the skin above his heart.  A sickly sweet aroma filled the air, overpowering, like barrels of rotting fruit.  Pure, frigid ice, sharp as a knife, plunged deep into his chest.  A will, heavy as stone, pressed down upon his.</p>
<p>He was in a black river, gasping for breath and fighting desperately to stay afloat, while a heavy weight slowly and relentlessly dragged him down.  His head bobbed under.  The thick, black, oily liquid of the river—so cold, so horribly sweet—enveloped him.  His lungs burned as the air in them ran out and the need to breathe became overpowering.  He fought, struggled, tried to kick his way to the surface, but the weight anchored him down, dragging him deeper and deeper.</p>
<p>His world was total darkness.  No light.  No hope.  No hint of warmth.  His lungs were on fire.  If he breathed he would drown.  If he didn’t breathe, he would die.</p>
<p>His mouth opened on a deep, desperate, despairing gasp.  Oily blackness flooded in, filling his lungs, filling him.</p>
<p>With one last, choking, weeping cry for his lost life, Den Brodson surrendered.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Chapter One</p>
<p>Celieria ~ The Garreval</p>
<p>Seven days after departing Celieria City, the Fey reached the end of the mortal world.  As the small caravan of wagons and loping Fey crested the top of a last, rolling hill, Ellysetta’s breath caught in her throat.  A great fertile plain stretched out below, miles of land sectioned into hedgerow-partitioned fields, all greening with well tended crops against a dramatic backdrop of majestic mountains thrusting up from the earth like a solid wall.</p>
<p>“Oh, Papa,” Ellysetta breathed.</p>
<p>“’Tis the most beautiful sight I’ve ever seen,” Sol Baristani agreed in a whisper as he sat beside his daughter on the wagon seat, a lit match held, forgotten, over the tobacco-filled bowl of his favorite pipe.</p>
<p>Together, father and daughter stared in awestruck wonder at the majestic peaks filling the horizon.</p>
<p>At first glance, the mountains almost appeared to be a single range but Ellysetta knew from the countless histories she’d read that they were actually two separate mountain ranges.  The fierce Rhakis arrowed down from the north, nearly colliding with the stately swells of the Silvermist range.  Only a scant mile separated the two, an infamous pass known as the Garreval, gateway to the Fading Lands.</p>
<p>Misty clouds swirled across forested cliffs and steep highland pastures of the Silvermist mountains.  The clouds hovering over the Rhakis were less gentle, dark with rain and boiling into lightning-shot thunderheads as the sharp peaks continued northward towards Eld.  Those soft clouds and fierce storms merged into a dense, shimmering fog that filled the pass between the two ranges, and Ellysetta gave a small shiver at the sight.</p>
<p>The Faering Mists.  The magical barrier that surrounded the Fading Lands, impenetrable to all but the Fey.</p>
<p>The match Sol held over the tobacco-filled bowl of his pipe burned down unnoticed until the heat scorched his fingers.  “Sweet brightness!” he yelped. Hissing, he shook the match out, tossed the scorched remains over the edge of the wagon, and blew on his stinging fingers.</p>
<p>Ellie turned, trying to stifle her laughter as she reached for his hand.  This wasn’t the first time her father had seared his hands on a matchstick. It wouldn’t be the last.   His attention was too easily caught by some real or imagined beauty—often while he held a lit match in his hand, thanks to his fondness for his pipe.</p>
<p>“I’m all right, Ellie-girl,” Sol protested when she took his hand.</p>
<p>“I know, Papa, but Marissya says I should practice whenever I get the opportunity.” She held her father’s hand in hers and focused on the reddened flesh, trying to block out the flood of thoughts and emotions that poured into her mind when she touched his skin.</p>
<p>Love.  Worry.  Instinctive fear, tinged with guilt.  He still wasn’t comfortable with the shining brightness and palpable magic of the beautiful stranger sitting beside him.</p>
<p>Ellie forced back the stab of pain his fear caused and tried to focus her thoughts the way Marissya v’En Solande, the Fey’s most powerful healer had shown her.  Throughout the week-long westward journey across Celieria, Marissya had spent several bells each day with Ellysetta, teaching her how to wield her own powerful healing magic.</p>
<p>Though Ellysetta still had much to learn, she now understood on a conscious level the basic patterns of the healing weaves she’d been unconsciously spinning all her life.  Marissya assured her she’d soon be able  to summon and spin those weaves on demand, using only the amount of power needed to weave them, but restraint was something Ellie still had difficulty mastering.  The powerful, hidden barriers that had kept her magic bottled up were gone now, and the weaves she’d once spun with such subtlety now surged forth at her call like a river gushing through a shattered dam.</p>
<p>Remembering Marissya’s admonitions, Ellysetta reached down into the well of energy at her center, carefully calling forth the glowing threads of power she would need.  Red Fire to draw the heat from the wound. Green Earth to heal the damaged flesh.  Lavender Spirit to steal away the pain.  And something else Ellysetta had discovered while observing Marissya during their lessons.  A special, golden something that Marissya called a <em>shei’dalin’s</em> love, the mysterious force that was unique to Fey women.  It made all the threads of the <em>shei’dalin’s</em> weave shimmer with a warm, golden cast.  No Fey warrior could spin his magic the same way.</p>
<p>“It springs from the compassion and empathy of a Fey woman’s heart,” Marissya had told her.  “It isn’t a seventh branch of magic.  We cannot separate it out and weave the <em>shei’dalin’s</em> love by itself.  It’s just the natural way Fey women weave magic.”</p>
<p>“And do I weave <em>shei’dalin’s</em> love the same way?”</p>
<p>At that, Marissya had laughed.  “Feyreisa, you do <em>nothing</em> the same as other Fey.”  Then, still smiling, she’d added, “I’m sure you must, Ellysetta, but when you weave, your magic is so bright, its power blinds me.”</p>
<p>Now, holding Papa’s hand in hers, she attempted to summon her magic and wield it with control and restraint, as Marissya had been trying to teach her.</p>
<p>She found the threads, wove them in a loose healing pattern, and with a gentle “push” of power, sent the weave into her father’s hand.  The push slammed out of her with the force of a hammer strike, her weave flaring with blinding brightness.</p>
<p>The startled jerk of Papa’s body and sudden widening of his eyes made her grimace in dismay.</p>
<p>“Light save me,” she muttered under her breath.  Then, in a louder voice, she said, “Are you all right, Papa?”</p>
<p>Sol blinked several times and took cautious inventory of himself.  When he didn’t find any missing—or extra—appendages, he gave a smile. “Well done, Ellie-girl.  The finger’s good as new.”   He held up his hand to show her.</p>
<p>Sure enough, the angry red burn on the tip of his finger was gone.  But that wasn’t the problem.   She watched her father run his newly healed hand through his hair.  His hand stopped in mid-motion.</p>
<p>“Oh,” he said.  Sol Baristani was of the age when many mortal men began “thinning the forest” as Papa put it.  Or, rather, he had been. Keeping his gaze fixed on her face, he patted the newly thickened growth of hair crowning his scalp.  “Well…er… that’s not so bad.  Provided it’s not some frightful shade of green.”  His brows drew together in mock concern, and he added in a hesitant, rather fearful tone, “Er…it’s not green, is it, Ellie?”</p>
<p>Ellie sighed.  “No, Papa, it’s not green.”</p>
<p>With a twinkle in his eye, he pretended relief.  “Well then, there you go.”  He laughed and grinned, and reached across to pat her hand.  “You did good, Ellie-girl.  You may have overdone the weave a little, but the finger’s healed.  Besides, what man wouldn’t like a little more hair when his own starts to go missing, eh?”  Thrusting his pipe stem back between his teeth, he lit a fresh match and held it to the bowl, puffing until the shreds of tobacco began to glow orange and puffs of fragrant smoke wreathed his newly regenerated headful of hair&#8230;and a face that had lost at least ten years of age in an instant.</p>
<p>She forced a smile. “<em>Beylah vo</em>, Papa.”  Weaving youth on mortals wasn’t one of the things Marissya had taught her—but apparently the patterns were very similar to regular healing.</p>
<p>A happy shriek sounded at Ellysetta’s right.  The Fey warrior, Kiel vel Tomar, his long silvery-blond hair woven into a plait, ran past with Ellysetta’s nine-year-old sister Lorelle perched on his shoulders. Kieran vel Solande, Marissya’s son, followed a few paces behind.  Lorelle’s twin, Lillis, sat on Kieran’s shoulders and kicked his chest with her heels as if he were one of the Elvish <em>ba’houda</em> horses pulling the wagons in their caravan.  Her small fingers clutched tufts of his thick, wavy brown hair.</p>
<p>Lillis and Lorelle were clad in miniature versions of Marissya and Ellie’s brown traveling leathers, which they had insisted Kieran weave for them.  Kieran and Kiel had done their best to keep the children’s minds off the grief of Mama’s death by making each day of the trip a new adventure.  The twins had taken to the idea, enthusiastically using even the briefest stops as an excuse to explore—always under watchful Fey eyes, of course, but rarely in clean, tidy places.  The keepsake boxes Papa had carved for them years ago were now overflowing with treasures from their journey: small rocks, wildflowers, snail shells, bird feathers, whatever caught their attention.</p>
<p>Kieran cast a grin Ellysetta’s way.  His steps faltered as he caught sight of Sol Baristani; then his gaze shot to Ellysetta.  She blushed furiously.  A <em>shei’dalin’s</em> ability to restore mortal youth was a secret the Fey had guarded for millennia, and she had just revealed it for anyone to see.</p>
<p>Fortunately, before he could say anything, Lillis tugged on Kieran’s hair and bounced on his shoulders.  “Faster, Kieran!” she cried.  “They’re beating us!”</p>
<p>With a final look and a shake of his head, Kieran turned away and raced down the grassy hill after Kiel and Lorelle.</p>
<p>Ellysetta watched them and the tension that had been growing in her all week squeezed her chest tight.  They were nearing the end of the journey.  One more day, two at the most, then she would leave what remained of her beloved family to follow her new husband Rain through the mysterious Faering Mists, perhaps never to return.</p>
<p>Sol patted her hand and nodded his chin in the direction of the twins.  “It is good to hear them laughing again.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she agreed.  The twins hadn’t had much cause for laughter of late.</p>
<p>“They miss their mother,” Sol said.  “They try to smile and laugh for my sake, but I hear them each night, crying into their pillows and pleading for her to come back.”</p>
<p>Just that quick, Ellie’s own sharp grief struck hard.  Her face crumpled and her eyes filled with tears.  “I miss her too, Papa.”  Stern as Mama sometimes was, Ellie had never doubted her love—and never loved her back with any less than her whole heart.</p>
<p>“Oh, Ellie.”  Sol slid an arm around his daughter’s shoulders and pulled her close.  “My sweet, Ellie-girl.  We all miss her.”</p>
<p>She turned her face into his neck as she had so many times in the past and sobbed.  And her father held her, as he always had, patting her back and rocking her as if she were still the small child who’d crawled on his lap for comfort after evil visions tormented her dreams.</p>
<p>She cried until her tears were spent, and when they were done, wiped her eyes as best she could and begged again as she had so many times this last week, “Won’t you please come with us, Papa?  Rain will grant you and the girls escort through the Mists.  You could live there, with us, in safety.”</p>
<p>Sol sighed.  “We are not Fey like you, Ellie. Our home is here, in Celieria, and the last promise I ever made your mother before…”  His voice thickened.  He drew a quick breath and swallowed the lump in his throat.  “I promised her that day before she left for the cathedral that if anything ever happened to her, I’d make sure the twins were raised in Celieria, among their own kind.”</p>
<p>“Papa, she asked you for that promise when she still thought I was demon-possessed and the Fey were evil. She realized her mistake in the end.  Don’t you think she’d realize her mistake about this too?”  They’d been over this a thousand times since leaving Celieria City.  “Wouldn’t she’d rather know the girls were safe regardless of where they live?”</p>
<p>“I gave her my word, Ellie.  Shh.”  He put a finger on her lips to forestall further objections. “It was my last vow to her, as sacred to me now as if I’d sworn it to her on her deathbed.  So long as there is a chance of the girls living here in peace among our own kind, then here we will remain.  You’re Fey, Ellysetta.  You belong in the Fading Lands.  We are mortal, and we belong here.” His eyes were filled with sadness but also unwavering determination.</p>
<p>Seeing that look, Ellysetta knew she’d lost.  Her father was the most loving man she’d ever known, but when he had that hint of steel in his eye, it meant he’d made up his mind and would not be budged.  She bit her lip, stared at the hands clasped tightly in her lap and nodded.</p>
<p>She heard her father sigh again, saw him shift in the periphery of her vision.  His hand, broad and bronzed and callused from his years of woodcarving, reached out to cover hers.  Love, rich and sweet and steadfast as love ever had been, poured into her through the touch, along with pride and gratitude, and a thought that rang in her head clear as a bell.</p>
<p><em>I love you, my sweet Ellie-girl.  No man could love a daughter more, and no man could be prouder than I am of you. Though I will do everything I can to honor your mother’s wishes, I won’t risk my children’s safety needlessly.  If trouble comes, the girls and I will pass through the Mists.  That’s my oath to you.</em></p>
<p>Through vision blurred by swimming tears, she met his eyes and saw for herself the truth she could feel through the touch of his skin.  It was more than she’d expected.  His promise was an oath he considered as binding as the vow he’d made to his wife.</p>
<p>As the wagon continued its swift, smooth roll down the grassy hill towards the fertile plains of the Garreval below, Sol looked out at the majestic mountains and green fields.</p>
<p>“This is a beautiful place,” he said.  “I think your Mama would have been very happy here.”</p>
<p>Ellie laid her head on her father’s shoulder.  “I think so too.”</p>
<p>* * *</p>
<p>“The redirection weaves are up.  The Garreval is secure.” Belliard vel Jelani, General of the Fading Lands, released the net of Spirit threads tying him to the dozens of Fey scouts spread in a five-mile radius around their destination.  As they had all week, the warriors had cleared the caravan’s path of mortals and spun redirection weaves to turn away curious locals and Eld spies.</p>
<p>Just over three weeks ago, Celierians and their families had lined the roads and cart paths from the Garreval to Celieria City to watch the immortal Fey run past on their annual trek to the nation’s capital.  This time, not one mortal would see or remember the Fey’s passing.</p>
<p>Bel turned to find Rain staring off towards the Fey caravan, his face drawn.  “Rain? Something is wrong?”  Bel’s hand went instinctively to his steel, his fingers hovering over the hilts of his Fey’cha throwing daggers.</p>
<p>“<em>Nei</em>.”  With obvious effort, Rain dragged his attention back to his best friend.  “Well, <em>aiyah</em>, but no different from the wrongness that has followed us since leaving Celieria.  She weeps again for her mother.”</p>
<p>Bel glanced down at his hands, away from the pain in Rain’s lavender eyes.   For all his power—impressive even by Fey standards—Rain could not weave the sorrow from his beloved’s heart.  Oh, he could have spun a rosy illusion of happiness upon her—or asked another Fey to steal her memories—but that was not the Fey way.  Both honor and love bound him, and he could do only what Fey men had for centuries: stand strong for his mate and offer what comfort his love could provide.</p>
<p>“You should go to her,” Bel said.</p>
<p>Rain sighed and shook his head.  “<em>Nei</em>, she needs him more than me now—someone who loved her mother as deeply as she did.”</p>
<p>Bel had known Rain too long not to hear the comment left unsaid.  “Everything Lauriana Baristani did, she did for love,” he reminded Rain gently.  “And in the end she gave her life to save her child.”</p>
<p>“I realize that,” Rain replied, “but I cannot pretend an affection I never felt.”</p>
<p>Bel nudged a large clump of field grass with the toe of one black boot.  Lauriana had never wanted Ellysetta to wed the Fey king, and she’d made sure everyone—including Rain—knew it.  “Perhaps,” he finally said, “Ellysetta doesn’t need you to pretend love you did not feel.  Perhaps it is enough just to know you are there, loving her.”</p>
<p>“She knows.”  Rain swept a sharp gaze over the valley below.  “So, there’s been no unusual activity in the last four days, and not a single person following us since we left Celieria City.  I’m not sure if I should be relieved or suspicious.  The Eld I knew would never let us get away so easily.”</p>
<p>Bel took the hint.  “Perhaps our decoys are working.”  A separate party of Fey had gone north, towards Orest, accompanied by a magic-warded wagon, so that Eld spies might think it held Ellysetta and her family.</p>
<p>“Let us hope so,” Rain said, his face set in stone.  “But let us also prepare for the alternative—and not only from the Mages.  If the <em>dahl’reisen</em> learn that Ellysetta can restore souls…”</p>
<p>Ice shivered through Bel’s veins. “You don’t think Gaelen would…”  His voice broke off in disbelief, then surged back in protest.  “He is Ellysetta’s <em>lu’tan</em>.”  After Ellysetta restored his soul, Galen had bloodsworn himself to her service, vowing to protect her for the duration of his life and the death that followed.   No <em>lu’tan</em> would break that vow. “Gaelen is Fey once more.  His honor has been restored.  Do not forget, without him Ellysetta would already be in the hands of the Mages.”</p>
<p>Rain’s jaw set.  “I have not forgotten.  Nor do I forget that all it takes is one look at his face without that scar, and his <em>dahl’reisen</em> friends will know the truth.”  Of all the Fey, only <em>dahl’reisen</em> scarred, and they only when they made the kill that tipped their immortal souls into darkness.  When Ellysetta had restored Gaelen’s soul, she’d wiped his <em>dahl’reisen</em> scar from existence.  “No matter what trust you may feel for Gaelen as a fellow <em>lu’tan</em>, do not let your guard down.  The <em>dahl’reisen</em> cannot be trusted, and they could attempt to use his long acquaintance with them to their advantage.”</p>
<p>Rain’s expression grew grim.  Bel felt the brief surge of power, quickly harnessed, that came in response to whatever unpleasant thoughts were crossing Rain’s mind.</p>
<p>“I think I will return to Ellysetta after all,” Rain said.</p>
<p>He stepped back and the brief surge of power became a breathtaking flood as he summoned the Change.  Sparkling gray mist billowed out in whirling clouds around Rain, and when it cleared a death-black tairen crouched in his place.  The great winged cat fixed one large, glowing purple eye upon Bel, and a throbbing Spirit voice sounded in Bel’s head, powerful and resonant with the rich musical tones of the tairen.</p>
<p><em>**To Teleon, brother, and tomorrow, to home.**</em></p>
<p>* * *</p>
<p>Ellysetta climbed out of the wagon to walk the last mile across the greening plains of the Garreval as twenty Fey raced on ahead to secure their destination: the outpost built at the base of the ruins of the once-great fortress of Teleon.  Lillis and Lorelle walked beside her, their small hands clutching hers.</p>
<p>She would always be grateful for this time Rain had given her with her family.  He could have flown her straight to the Fading Lands on tairen-back but he had not.  Knowing how dear her family was to her, he’d arranged for all of them to travel together.  The Elvish <em>ba’houda</em> horses, bred for endurance and speed, traveled much faster than mortal steeds; but Rain in tairen form, using magic to power his flight, could have traversed the thousand miles across Celieria in a single day.</p>
<p>Even though he still left small courtship gifts on her pillow each morning, this extra time with her family was his true gift to her, and she worked to sear every precious memory into her mind.  Like this one: the girls tripping through the tall grass at her side, their hair bouncing with their steps.  A slight breeze blowing, fragrant with the scents of mist off the mountains and warm grass waving in the wind.  She squeezed the twins’ small hands and watched dimples flash in their cheeks as laughter bubbled from them.</p>
<p>Dear gods, how she loved them.  And if any harm ever befell them because of her…</p>
<p><em>**No dark thoughts, </em>shei’tani<em>.**</em> The admonishment slipped into her mind on a now-familiar weave of Spirit.</p>
<p>Ellysetta glanced up at the great winged black cat soaring swiftly towards her over the top of a nearby hill.  <em>**Not so dark this time,**</em> she answered. <em>**Only a little grey.**</em></p>
<p>She could not blame him for thinking the worst.  Her mind had not been peaceful since leaving Celieria City.  The High Mage might not know where her body was, but despite Rain’s presence and the twenty-five fold weaves the Fey placed around the camp each night, the High Mage been able to find her soul more than once when she dreamed.  He’d not managed to put another Mark on her, but each time he’d found her, she’d bolted out of sleep with her tairen roused to a raging bloodlust, roaring for death and vengeance.</p>
<p>Consequently, she’d spent most nights wide awake and flying the moonlit skies with Rain.</p>
<p><em>**I was just thinking I’ll miss my sisters when we’re gone.  And I can’t help worrying about their safety**</em></p>
<p><em>**Kieran and Kiel will allow no harm to befall them.**</em> The two Fey and two hundred of their brethren would be staying behind at Lord Teleos’s ancestral estate near the Garreval to guard Ellysetta’s family.</p>
<p>Rain swooped down the side of the hill fast and hard, Changing in mid-flight to the black-leather-clad form of his lean Fey body.  He landed running, and a brief, swift jog brought him quickly to her side.</p>
<p>Just the sight of him and his glowing lavender eyes made Ellysetta’s breath catch in her throat.  All Fey were ravishing creatures, but the legendary Rain Tairen Soul outshone them all.  He was an immortal king whose unshielded Fey beauty dazzled the senses, his face a masterpiece of breathtaking male perfection, saved from prettiness by the thrust of strong bones beneath the skin and the aura of deadly promise that swirled just below the surface.</p>
<p>He was a Tairen Soul, the strongest and rarest of all Fey, a master of all five branches of magic wielded by the Fey, capable of Changing into one of the magical, fire-breathing tairen of the Fading Lands.</p>
<p>He was her truemate, the other half of her soul; and when at last Ellysetta found the courage and unconditional trust necessary to embrace the darkest shadows of his soul and her own without fear—to bare without reservation every thought, every fear, every shame and Eld-spawned malignancy inside her—then at last their souls would join for all eternity.   If she failed, their uncompleted bond would drive Rain to madness and eventually death.</p>
<p>Yet even knowing that, Rain’s love—intense and absolute—shone from his eyes as he approached, setting Ellysetta’s senses aflame.  She began to tremble.  <em>**Shei’tan.**</em></p>
<p>Luckily, before Ellysetta could embarrass herself, her young sister Lillis squealed and threw herself into Rain’s arms, shattering the intoxicating spell holding Ellysetta captive.</p>
<p>“Will you take us flying again today, Rain?”  Lillis’s long eyelashes fluttered and her rosy lips curved in a beguiling smile.  Only nine years old she might be, but Lillis Baristani had already honed her feminine wiles to an art.</p>
<p>“Oh! Yes! Yes! Please do!”  Choosing natural exuberance over winsome guile, Lorelle bounded up, grabbed Rain’s free hand and jumped up and down with excitement.</p>
<p>Ellie smothered a laugh.  Lillis and Lorelle had shed their fear of Rain and his power.  He had become part of their family.  Which also meant he’d become a hapless male to be twined around their fingers.</p>
<p>Rain, in return, had learned how to relax around them and let them draw out the Fey-gentleness in his heart.  Though he was a man who could slaughter his enemies without mercy, with the twins, he now laughed and smiled like a man who had never known darkness.</p>
<p>“Let us get you safely settled in your new home first, <em>ajianas</em>. Then I will take you both flying again.”</p>
<p>Of course, he still had to work on how to say no.</p>
<p>“Hooray! Hooray!”  Lorelle threw up her arms and danced around him in enthusiastic circles.</p>
<p>“Can we have a new kitty in our new home?” Lillis asked, fluttering her lashes again.  “Since we had to leave Love behind.”</p>
<p>Kieran had convinced the girls that Love the kitten, who had a terrible aversion to magic, would be miserable living in the Fading Lands or staying with them so close to the powerful magic of the Mists.  They’d reluctantly agreed to leave Love behind in Celieria City with Gaspare Fellows, the Queen’s Master of Graces.</p>
<p>Rain smiled.  “A new kitten?  I imagine Kieran and Kiel can arrange that.  Perhaps one for each of you, hmm?”</p>
<p>Lillis strangled him with more hugs, then leapt out of his arms so she and her twin could run tell Kiel and Kieran they were going flying again and that Rain had said they could have a new kitten.</p>
<p>Ellie shook her head and watched them go.  “One day you will have to learn the fine line between loving adoration and slavish devotion.”</p>
<p>He pressed a kiss on her palm.  “Let me give them what gifts and freedoms I can.  Their lives will soon have restriction enough.  Teleos!”  Rain lifted a hand to the Fey-eyed Celierian Great Lord, Devron Teleos, who stood beside the truemates Marissya and Dax v’En Solande, staring in silence at the place that was to be the Baristani family’s new home.  “How long has it been since you’ve been to the Garreval?”</p>
<p>Teleos’s mouth drew down in a grimace.  “I’ve made a point of visiting all my holdings at least once every year, but as you see, there’s not much to draw me here.”</p>
<p>Below, on the lower slopes of the Rhakis mountains, the remains of a once-great fortress rose from the tumbled rubble of silvery blue stone: Teleon, the former family seat of House Teleos.  Even after a thousand years, its once-fabled beauty still lay shattered and abandoned, its Fey-spun towers and parapets crumbled, the remains covered in lichen and mosses and crowded with tufts of cliffgrass.  A small stone outpost—crudely built and clearly mortal in origin—had been constructed atop a small hill at the base of the mountain, not far from the remains of what had once been a glorious gate into the walled city-fortress.  Smoke curled up from a vent hole in the outpost’s small central hall.</p>
<p>Ellysetta tried to hide her dismay.  This was her family’s new home?</p>
<p>As if hearing her thoughts, Lord Teleos said, “I feel a poor host for offering my guests so rude an accommodation.”  The Celierian Great Lord, a descendant of Rain’s long-dead friend Shanis Teleos, eyed the remains of his once-great family estate with grim eyes.   “Rain, are you sure the Feyreisa’s family would not be better served in one of my more respectable holdings?”</p>
<p>Rain smiled and shook his head, his straight, silky black hair sliding over his black-leather-clad shoulders.  “<em>Nei</em>, this is perfect for our needs.”</p>
<p>“This was a place of great beauty once,” Lord Teleos said in a sorrowful voice. In the days before the raising of the Mists, his family had been close friends of the Fey, and the many Fey ancestors in his family tree had left Devron and all his forebears stamped with Fey eyes, a glow to their skin, and lifespans much longer than those of pure mortals. Teleon, which had once been an estate of inestimable beauty, had been a gift from the Fey to their kin in House Teleos.</p>
<p>“<em>Aiyah</em>, it was,” Marissya agreed.  “I remember the terraced gardens with all their fountains.  It reminded me of Dharsa.”</p>
<p>Lord Teleos regarded the ruins of his family estate with somber eyes.</p>
<p>“I always wished my ancestors had repaired it once the poison of the Wars was cleansed, but perhaps it’s best they never did.  Mortal hands could never have done Teleon justice.”  He sighed.  “Some things, once lost, are better left in the past.”</p>
<p>Rain made a sound in his throat that sounded like something torn between a growl and a laugh.  “And some things deserve to live again.”  His eyes crinkled at the edges.  “You did say we could make it habitable, Dev.”</p>
<p>Teleos’s brows drew together.  “You mean to restore Teleon?”</p>
<p>“<em>Aiyah te nei</em>.” Yes and no.  And on that mysterious note, Rain smiled and said, “Come.  I think you will find you are not so poor a host as you fear.”</p>
<p>Brimming with curiosity, Marissya, Dax, Teleos and Ellysetta followed Rain as he led them the final half mile to the foot of the mountains.</p>
<p>Near the gate of the small outpost, and stationed along its outer wall, two dozen armored Celierian soldiers stood at attention.  To a man, they sported snarling tairen’s-head helmets and white tabards edged with scarlet and emblazoned with the arms of House Teleos: a golden tairen rampant on a white field with a rising red sun.  Pennants of white, scarlet and gold fluttered in the breeze.</p>
<p>They passed through the open gate, but when Lord Teleos would have headed for the main hall in the center, Rain stopped him. “<em>Nei</em>, Dev, not that way.”</p>
<p>Bel ran up just as the small party rounded the corner of the hall and started towards the back wall.  Ellysetta turned to greet him, only to find him frowning up at the mountain towering over the back wall of the outpost.  The shimmering radiance of the Mists was very bright, like a shadow made of light rather than darkness.  Though mortal eyes would not see it, the whole mountainside glowed and rippled with undulating bands of magic.</p>
<p>Rain turned to cast a glance over his shoulder and smiled at Bel’s perplexed look.  The rear stone wall of the outpost lay before him.  Rain took another step.  The air around him rippled like water in a pond.</p>
<p>With one more stride, Rain passed through the wall and disappeared from view.</p>
<p>“Spit and scorch me,” Dev breathed.  He glanced at Marissya and Dax, then charged after Rain, plunging headfirst into what seemed like solid stone.  The air rippled again, and Lord Teleos vanished too.</p>
<p>“Spirit weave,” Kiel said, his eyes sweeping over the mountainside.  There was no sign of Rain or Lord Teleos, only the rear wall of the outpost and, beyond that, the tumbled remains of Teleon scattered across the mountainside, tufts of cliff grass and stands of hardy mountain trees waving in the breeze.</p>
<p>“Scorching clever one,” Bel said.  “They’re using the magic-shadow off the Mists to mask the energy of the weave.  Not even a Spirit master would see it until he was almost on top of it.”</p>
<p>“Well?” Kieran said with an eager grin.  He held out a hand to Lillis.  “What are we waiting for?  Let’s go see what’s behind the weave.”</p>
<p>With a burbling laugh, she stuck her hand in his and they ran up the trampled path after Rain and Teleos.  Lorelle grabbed Kiel’s hand and yanked the Water master with her as she darted forward in hot pursuit.</p>
<p>Ellysetta, Bel and Sol followed close behind, and when they stepped through the rippling wall of illusion and cast eyes on the sight beyond, Ellysetta’s jaw dropped open in stunned wonder.</p>
<p>“Bright Lord save me,” Sol whispered, staring awestruck at the gleaming magnificence before him.  “I’ve never seen anything so beautiful.”</p>
<p>“It’s like a magical palace from a Fey tale,” she breathed.</p>
<p>They were standing at the open, arching gate of an immense mountain fortress of unparalleled grace and beauty.  Silvery blue stone soared high into the sky in a dazzling display of Fey artistry and architecture.  Crenellated walls gave way to lush, gracefully terraced gardens  bursting with trees, fountains, fragrant shrubs and flowers.  Pennants in the bold colors of House Teleos fluttered in the breeze from every tower and along the series of interior walls that ringed up the mountainside and circled the upper keep with level after level of protection and silvery blue beauty.</p>
<p>“Ellie! Papa! Come look!”  Lillis and Lorelle stood in the center of a small grassy park nestled against the second inner wall.  They laughed and danced beneath the graceful, arching branches of cherry blossom trees as pale pink petals rained softly down upon them.  Kieran and Kiel watched the children with indulgent smiles.</p>
<p>Lord Teleos stood dumbstruck at Rain’s side as Ellysetta and Sol crossed the lower courtyard to join the twins.  “You did it,” he said.  “You restored her to her former beauty.”</p>
<p>“Not completely,” Rain admitted.  He dragged his gaze away from Ellysetta and the children and gave Devron Teleos his full attention.  “A number of the gardens and buildings on the middle levels are still just Spirit weaves, but the walls and gates are real, and defensible, as is the manor at the top.”</p>
<p>“Even so…this is an amazing feat.  How did you manage it?”</p>
<p>“Three thousand Fey stand guard at the great war-castles of Chatok and Chakai beyond the Mists.  While we journeyed across Celieria, they came through the Mists to prepare a suitable home for the Feyreisa’s family.  And to prepare Teleon for battle once more.”</p>
<p>Lord Teleos turned to him in surprise.  “You think the Eld will strike here?  With the Mists blocking any hope of entrance to the Fading Lands?”</p>
<p>Rain looked across the flagstone-cobbled courtyard to the lower garden, where Ellysetta, Sol and the twins were inspecting a marble fountain of dancing maidens whose slender, upstretched fingers rained veils of clear water into a small pond.</p>
<p>His expression lost any hint of softness.  “If the Eld come,” he said, “I doubt it will be passage through the Mists they’re after.”</p>
<h1>Chapter Two</h1>
<p>In sorrow, the blood-sown earth despairs, and granite stone weeps bitter tears.<br />
In fields once green, love lies entombed beneath a silent lake of glass<br />
Forged in raging tairen flames, dark with the death of dreams.<br />
There, shades of men and once-great kings yet battle evil’s tide<br />
While silvery maidens softly dance and sing of love that died.</p>
<p>Sariel’s Lament by Avian of Celieria</p>
<p>Ellysetta stood on the balcony of a well-appointed bedchamber in one of Teleon’s spacious upper towers and looked up at the Mists.  Several bells earlier, the setting sun set the Mists ablaze, giving the illusion of a curtain of fire burning across the world.  Now the night was deep and the Mists were a shifting, shimmering glow of multicolored radiance against the dark of a near-moonless sky.</p>
<p>Rain and Lord Teleos had spent the day inspecting Teleon’s defenses and assisting the Fey in weaving silvery blue stone into magic-warded buildings and fortifications, Marissya, Ellysetta and the too-exuberant twins—who simply could not bear to be cooped up inside—had ventured through acre after acre of terraced gardens and countless miles of corridors, rooms and levels of the newly restored fortress.  Though, as Rain had said, many of the middle gardens and buildings were naught but the shells of Spirit weaves—and how unsettling it was to enter a building only to have it disappear once you crossed the threshold!—there was still plenty of Earth-spun reality to explore; and the Fey who would be stationed here to protect the Baristanis would continue the reconstruction their brothers had begun until all of Teleon was restored to its former glory.</p>
<p>The girls, Ellysetta knew, would be happy here. With so much room to play and so many wondrous secrets to be discovered, it would be a long time before they felt the urge to stray from the safety of the keep in search of adventure.</p>
<p>The clap of bootheels on stone made her cast a glance over her shoulder.  Still clothed in black leather and full steel, his Fey skin as pale and luminous as pearls in moonlight, Rain approached.  He’d been meeting with Teleos, Bel, Kieran and Kiel to discuss the defense of Teleon and review troop strength and dispersal in the rest of Teleos’s holdings.</p>
<p>War was coming.  No matter how some still tiptoed around the truth, all of them knew it.  They only hoped there would be time enough to prepare before Celieria’s borders erupted into open battle.</p>
<p>And though it seemed a terrible thing to ask, Ellysetta had secretly prayed that when the attack came, the Eld’s first strike would come in some far distant part of Celieria like Orest or Celieria City so the Fey would have enough warning to evacuate Lillis, Lorelle, and Papa to safety behind the Faering Mists.</p>
<p>That secret prayer seemed ill-considered now.  The hearth witches of the north—and there had been plenty of them living in her childhood town of Hartslea, despite the strong Church presence there—believed that wishing harm upon others would bring three times that harm to the wisher.  Was hoping the first battle of a war started somewhere else the same as wishing harm upon another?  Ellysetta shivered at the prospect.</p>
<p>“Cold?” Rain asked.</p>
<p>“A little.” She seized on the excuse, not wanting to admit how nervous a silly superstition made her.</p>
<p>“There is a thing I need to do tonight before returning to the Fading Lands.  I had hoped you would come with me, but if you are cold, perhaps you should stay here, instead, and try to get some sleep.”</p>
<p>“No, I’m fine.”  She reached for his hand.  “Of course, I’ll come with you.”</p>
<p>“Then let’s go—and bring your cloak.”</p>
<p>Ten chimes later, they were soaring through the night skies high over Teleon.  Ellysetta stretched out her arms and turned her face up to the stars.  Rain spun a light Fire weave to keep her warm as the chill, thin air swept past.</p>
<p><em>**Hold on.**</em> The brief command was her only warning before Rain twitched back his rounded tairen ears, spouted a warming jet of flame that lit the night, then tucked in his mighty wings and dove.</p>
<p>Ellysetta screamed with laughter and grabbed for the high, curving pommel of her saddle just as the unsettling thrill of weightlessness came over her. Together, she and Rain fell through the sky, plummeting freely towards the ground miles below.  The moonlit sky went silvery white, and fine droplets of water misted Ellysetta’s face as they plunged into a cloudbank.  She caught the tangy-fresh chill of cloudmist on her tongue, drinking its bracing sweetness.</p>
<p>One heartbeat, two, then they burst through the clouds back into the crisp, clear darkness of the night.</p>
<p>Tairen wings spread wide, snapped taut, and the wild, reckless plunge became a swooping ascent.  Ellysetta screamed again, a breathless, exuberant sound, and clutched the saddle tight.  <em>**Rain!  I think I left my stomach back there.**</em></p>
<p>The now-familiar, chuffing sound of tairen laughter joined the rush of the wind in her ears.  <em>**Hold on again, </em>shei’tani.<em> This is even better.**</em></p>
<p>Flows of magic spun out to bind her securely into place and Rain shot forward on a thrust of a magic-powered speed.  The world rushed by in a dizzying blur, and with a subtle shift of his wings, he sent them spiraling into a corkscrew roll. Shadowy earth and moonlit sky whirled in a wild kaleidoscope before Ellysetta’s dazzled eyes.</p>
<p>Another woman might have shrieked in fear and begged him to stop.  Ellysetta only flung back her head and laughed in delight.  Freedom coursed through her veins like a potent drug.</p>
<p>She would never tire of flying.  The limitless joy of dancing laughter-spangled winds, the thrill of diving through misty clouds and soaring so high she could almost scoop stardust with her fingertips: flying was a joy so rich, it chased back all sorrows and fears.  Well, she amended silently, <em>almost</em> all.</p>
<p><em>**Rain, do you honestly think when we get to Fey’Bahren, I can just walk in and spin a weave that will cure the kitlings of whatever is killing them?**</em> That was the reason Rain had come to Celieria to find her.  Unbeknownst to the outside world, a mysterious sickness had been killing unborn tairen kitlings in the egg for centuries, decimating their numbers until scarcely more than a dozen of the great cats still lived   A magical oracle called Shei’Kess, the Eye of Truth, had sent Rain to Celieria to find the key to saving the dying tairen.</p>
<p>She, Ellysetta Baristani, was that key.  Even if none of them actually knew how she was going to manage the miracle.</p>
<p><em>**I know it doesn’t sound like much of a plan,**</em> he said, <em>**but the tairen have never let any of our healers into the lair—not even Marissya.  You, however, are both a Tairen Soul and my truemate.  You’ll be able to enter the lair and weave healing on the kits as no other shei’dalin has been able to.**</em></p>
<p><em>**This assumes I’ll even know what weave to spin when I get there—let alone how to spin it.**</em></p>
<p><em>**That’s why Marissya will be going with us to Fey’Bahren—so she can continue your training and counsel you while you’re healing the tairen.  Besides, you may not even need her help.  She tells me you have been doing well in your studies.**</em></p>
<p><em>**She is being kind.**</em></p>
<p><em>**I doubt that.  I heard you healed Ravel’s new Fire master well enough this afternoon while I took your sisters flying.**</em></p>
<p>She gave a short laugh.  <em>**Oh, yes, I healed him all right.  I made that wound vanish as if it had never been.**</em></p>
<p><em>**There, you see—**</em></p>
<p><em>**And I erased every hint of weariness from the last week of travel,**</em> she informed him.  <em>**And wiped clean every shadow on his soul.  And filled him with such an abundance of energy that he shone like a newly minted coin and spent the rest of the day racing circles around my quintets until Bel and Ravel both threatened to pull red on him if he twitched another muscle.**</em></p>
<p>There was a brief silence; then Rain said in an oddly choked voice, <em>**Well, </em>shei’tani<em>, there are worse tribulations in life than healing a Fey too well.**</em> Chuffing tairen laughter vibrated in his throat.</p>
<p>Her eyes narrowed.  He found that amusing, did he?  <em>**And when he wasn’t annoying his brother Fey, he was following me around like a lovesick puppy.**</em></p>
<p>The chuffing laughter changed instantly to a low, rumbling growl.  Licks of flame seared the air before Rain’s muzzle.  <em>**Oh, was he?**</em> The fur on the back of his neck rose up, and his rounded ears lay back.  Tairen were territorial creatures, and they definitely did not appreciate encroaching males trespassing too near their mates.</p>
<p><em>**Ha! You see?  It’s not so funny anymore, is it?**</em> She ran a frustrated hand through the wind-tangled spirals of her hair.  <em>**I’m like a </em>rultshart<em> in a spider-silk shop. If Marissya asks me to summon a puff of Air, I call a gale so strong it knocks her off her feet.  If she asks me to summon Water, I nearly flood the encampment.**</em></p>
<p><em>**Your power is vast,**</em> Rain soothed, <em>**and no longer restrained by the weaves set upon you in childhood.  You simply need time and practice to learn how to wield it in moderation.** </em></p>
<p>She sighed.  <em>**Even assuming I can learn to control my power enough to spin the right weaves, what if healing doesn’t stop whatever’s killing the kits?**</em></p>
<p>His right wing dipped, and he banked, wheeling back around towards the south.  <em>**Then we go to Dharsa and start from the beginning, asking the Eye of Truth for guidance and searching the Hall of Scrolls in the hopes of finding answers.  Perhaps you can help us see something we have overlooked all these years, or perhaps your presence will induce the Eye to be more helpful.**</em></p>
<p><em>**Rain, be realistic.**</em></p>
<p><em>**I am.  I asked for the key to saving the tairen and the Fey and the Eye sent me to you.  To me, it seems quite clear that whatever is killing the kitlings, you are integral to making it stop.  I do not doubt this, even though you do.**</em></p>
<p>Rain’s wings spread wide and he sank through the sky in a circling glide, alighting on a stretch of empty field.  A cradling ribbon of Air magic deposited Ellysetta on her feet while the Change swirled around Rain’s tairen form in a sparkling mist.</p>
<p>His hands rose, long fingers threading into the wild spirals of her flame-red hair, the pad of his thumb brushing across her lips and leaving tingles of awareness behind.  “We’re here, <em>shei’tani</em>.”</p>
<p>Ellysetta glanced at their surroundings.  Nothing looked familiar.</p>
<p>“Where is ‘here’?”</p>
<p>His eyes went dark.  “This is Eadmond’s Field.”</p>
<p>Ellysetta’s breath hitched.</p>
<p>Eadmond’s field.</p>
<p>The place where, a thousand years ago, the most infamous battle of the Mage Wars had been fought.</p>
<p>The place where Rain’s first mate Sariel had died.</p>
<p>The place where Rain Tairen Soul had gone mad and scorched the world.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>OVERVIEW: Lady of Light and Shadows</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/overview-lady-of-light-and-shadows/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/overview-lady-of-light-and-shadows/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Oct 2010 18:00:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Excerpt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Avon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grade A]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guests and Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lady of Light and Shadows]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paranormal Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[September 2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Lady of Light and Shadows is the second half of C.L. Wilson&#8217;s original 1,000-page manuscript. That&#8217;s one of the reasons (a 1,000-page manuscript from a new author being another) her Tairen Soul series was rejected several times before finally being published. At that time, C.L., in her wildest dreams, never imagined her book would go [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023012/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Lady of Light and Shadows" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062023012.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a><a title="Lady of Light and Shadows" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023012/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Lady of Light and Shadows</em></a> is the second half of C.L. Wilson&#8217;s original 1,000-page manuscript. That&#8217;s one of the reasons (a 1,000-page manuscript from a <em>new</em> author being another) her Tairen Soul series was rejected several times before finally being published. At that time, C.L., in her wildest dreams, never imagined her book would go well beyond that thousand pages to culminate in five books. When dreams fly, they go fast and far.</p>
<p>In this book, Ellie is coming into her own, learning she&#8217;s more than who she thought she was all her life. Her romance with Rain is still fledgling but progressing toward something that calls to her soul. Of course, evil magic is not too far away no matter where this couple is. Especially now that Ellie is learning how to use her magic and also learning more about the darkness residing within her.</p>
<p>Below, enjoy my original review of <em>LoLaS</em>, along with an excerpt from the book.</p>
<p>Sandy M&#8217;s review of <a title="Lady of Light and Shadow" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023012/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><strong>Lady of Light and Shadows (Tairen Soul, Book 2)</strong></a> by <a title="C.L. Wilson" href="http://clwilson.com/index.htm" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson</a><br />
<em>Paranormal/Fantasy Romance published by Avon 28 Sep 10 (reissue)</em></p>
<p>Even though she is a woodcarver&#8217;s daughter, Ellysetta Baristani holds a powerful magic within herself, magic she is afraid to wield. She&#8217;s hopeful with her truemate&#8217;s help to learn to harness that magic to avoid such disasters as the one she wielded at her first official function as queen to Rain Tairen Soul&#8217;s king of the fey.</p>
<p>She not only has embarrassed herself, Rain, and all noblemen and women present, but she&#8217;s made it much more difficult for Rain to garner the votes he needs to halt the proposed opening of Cerelia&#8217;s borders with Eld, the place where evil magic resides within their mages. Then there are her dreams and nightmares that scare her to the point of wishing she had no magic. Ellie knows something horrible is going to happen, something that involves her and she doesn&#8217;t know what it is or how to stop it. All of the polishing in the world to make her a queen will make no difference if that evil finally claims her. If it weren&#8217;t for Rain, she doesn&#8217;t know what she would do.</p>
<p>Becoming more and more frustrated with the Cerelians&#8217; lack of suspicion concerning the Eld mages&#8217; current plans and their loss of trust in the fey, it is Rain&#8217;s courtship of Ellie that keeps him sane. He knows she is frightened of her magic, and now she has begun to share his dreams, which is making her situation all the more dire than ever before.</p>
<p>Teaching her how to call and use her magic has been going well, but it is those moments alone with his beloved that fill his heart with love and life, something he desperately needs as he gathers the evidence the Cerelian Council demands before they will deny their foolish plan to open their world to the evil just beyond their borders. Unbeknownst to both Rain and Ellysetta, that evil has already infiltrated their world and is working its way toward pulling them into an unknown from which they will never recover.</p>
<p>Fighting for their future together from attacks on several different fronts, including her mother, is taking its toll on Ellie and Rain, and it seems every day brings another problem that has to be resolved. Feeling more and more confident the mages are closer than any of them realize, Rain is determined to move their wedding up and then quickly whisk Ellie off to the fading lands where she will be out of harm&#8217;s way.</p>
<p>But as last-minute preparations are being made and Rain is in the middle of the city leaders&#8217; vote concerning their fate, Ellie is finally faced with the fear that has haunted her all her life and she&#8217;s fighting with all she&#8217;s got for everyone and everything she holds dear. The one time she needs her magic and her psychic link to Rain is when it seems to desert her and she is within evil&#8217;s grasp. Will Rain be able to reach her in time to save his truemate, the one and only person who completes him heart and soul? Will Ellysetta finally be able to cleave to her magic and become the woman she&#8217;s meant to be?</p>
<p>C.L. Wilson has done it once again with her sequel to <a title="Lord of the Fading Lands" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023020/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Lord of the Fading Lands</em></a>. <em>Lady of Light and Shadows</em> throws us straight into the lives of this endearing duo who work their way into our hearts all over again when their story picks up right where it left off in the previous book.</p>
<p>Rain and Ellie&#8217;s courtship, although wonderful to behold, is fraught with tension from different corners, but when Rain takes to the skies again in his tairen form with Ellie on his back, all is right with the world for a little while.</p>
<p>There is more heartache this time around, though; and the evil that was kept to the background before comes barreling full throttle into the forefront and pulls no punches.</p>
<p>Ms. Wilson&#8217;s writing is a wonder to behold and read. She will keep you in awe with emotion and suspense until the very last word, and then she will make you desperately long for the next edition of this beautiful four-book fantasy.</p>
<p><strong><img style="margin-left: 5px; width: 114px; margin-right: 5px; height: 114px;" title="SandyM" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/sandym-icon.jpg" alt="SandyM" hspace="5" width="114" height="114" align="left" />Grade: A+</strong></p>
<blockquote><p><strong> Summary:</strong></p>
<p>Since her earliest memories, Ellysetta Baristani has feared                                   magic, even as she has been inexorably drawn to all things Fey,                                   especially the poetry and legends of Rain Tairen Soul. Now claimed                                   as Rain’s truemate and no longer able to deny her own                                   magic, Ellysetta is swept into the very center of a struggle                                   filled with the magic and darkness she has always feared. The                                   High Mage of Eld wants to capture her. The most murderous <em> dahl’reisen</em> who ever lived wants her dead. And                                   her enemies will corrupt even the people she loves most in their                                   quest to claim her magic for themselves.</p>
<p><strong> Read an <a title="Lady of Light and Shadow excerpt" href="http://clwilson.com/TS_Lady%20of%20Light%20and%20Shadows.pdf" target="_blank">excerpt</a>.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Other books in this series:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023020/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Lord of the Fading Lands" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062023020.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="100" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023004/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Kind of Sword and Sky" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062023004.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Queen of Song and Souls" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960604.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="97" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062018965/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img title="Crown of Crystal Flame" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062018965.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="100" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><img title="purple_divider.jpg" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/thumbs/thumbs_purple_divider.jpg" alt="purple_divider.jpg" /></p>
<blockquote>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>I dream of wing and fang and pride, I dream of venom swift and sure.</em></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>I dream of song and cloud and sky, I dream of flame that scorches pure.</em></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>I dream of dancing crystal winds, and soaring high above the world.</em></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>I dream of enemies and prey that flee my dread and fiery roar.</em></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>Tairen Dreams</em>, by Jion vel Baris, Tairen Soul</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em> </em></span></p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em> </em></span></p>
<p><em>Ellysetta Baristani stood in the dark, fire-lit cavern of Fey’Bahren, the fabled nesting lair of the tairen.  Nearby, six leathery eggs lay incubating in a thick, cushioning layer of hot black sand.  A massive, </em><em>cinnamon-furred tail curled protectively around the eggs, its black tip rising and falling rhythmically, raising clouds of fine dark dust as it thumped the sand.  The dust swirled about Ellie like shadowy mist, darkening her skirts with a fine layer of sooty ash.  Unshed tears clogged the back of her throat and stung her eyes. </em></p>
<p><em>The tairen were dying.</em></p>
<p><em>Ellie couldn’t explain how she knew it.   The knowledge was just there in her mind, and it felt familiar, as if it had been there for a long, long time.</em></p>
<p><em>Calah, the last fertile female of the tairen pride, was growing feebler with each passing day, her life’s essence draining as she struggled to maintain the viability of her six unhatched kitlings.  The last hope of a future for the tairen rested with those tiny, unborn lives—three of them female— their life force weakening even as their small bodies matured in the egg. </em></p>
<p><em>The mother tairen’s cinnamon fur was dull and shedding.  Her proud feline head—larger than Ellysetta’s body—rested wearily on her forepaws, and her piercing golden eyes were closed.  Breath heaved in and out of her enormous body in great windy gusts.  She had not eaten in two weeks.  Her mate, Merdrahl, was frantic with worry.  He paced restlessly by the entrance to the nesting grounds, brown wings rustling, massive paws padding not so silently back and forth across the sands, low growls emanating from his powerful chest and rumbling through the cavern like thunder.  His dark brown tail curled and uncurled, flicking in agitation.  His fur was ruffled, his ears laid back, and his fangs dripped deadly tairen venom.  Every so often, he would pause, dig his claws into the rock, and heave an angry jet of flame.</em></p>
<p><em>If Merdrahl could have slain something to bring peace to his mate and protect their offspring, he would have.  And Ellysetta would have helped him.</em></p>
<p><em>A growl sounded overhead.  She looked up into the gleaming, pupilless green eyes of Sybharukai, the wise one, oldest of all female tairen and </em>makai<em>— leader—of the Fey’Bahren pride.  She crouched on the ledge above, her unsheathed front claws curling into the rock of her perch.  Her dark, silver-tipped gray fur gleamed like thunderclouds and smoke in the flickering light of the cavern.  The rounded points of her ears flicked continuously.  Her dark gray tail swished restlessly in the air, and the lethal bony spikes hidden in its furred tip stabbed at the rocks around her. Her wings unfolded and stretched high above her back, flapping twice.  The sharp claw at the mid-span joint on each wing gleamed like a curved </em>mei’cha<em> blade in the flickering light.</em></p>
<p>**I will find a way, Sybharukai.**<em> A deep, masculine voice sang the vow in the rich, vivid tones of tairen song.</em></p>
<p><em>Heat curled in Ellysetta’s belly, drawing inner muscles tight in a series of small, rippling shudders of remembered pleasure.  She turned and found Rain standing beside her.</em></p>
<p><em>Rainier vel’En Daris, the Tairen Soul, the legendary Fey shapeshifter who had once scorched the world in a wild, grief-stricken fury over the death of his beloved mate, Sariel.</em></p>
<p><em>Rain Tairen Soul, King of the Fey, who had stepped from the sky to claim Ellysetta as his shei’tani, his truemate, the only woman ever born with whom he could form a soul bond even stronger than the love bond he’d held with Sariel.</em></p>
<p><em>His long black hair hung down his back, straight and fine, framing a face of breathtaking masculine beauty.  Black Fey leathers hugged broad shoulders, slim hips, and long, lean legs.  His deadly swords and the scores of throwing knives tucked into the bands criss-crossing his chest gleamed golden in the flickering firelight.  His lavender eyes were glowing, his beautiful mouth grim. </em></p>
<p><em>“I will find a way,” he said again, aloud this time but still addressing the majestic gray tairen.  “I will not fail you.” </em></p>
<p><em>Turning, he strode off the nesting sands towards a wide opening at the end of the cavern.  Ellie hurried after him and together they jogged up a long, winding passage through the mountain and emerged on a wide, sunlit ledge high above the Fading Lands.  Ellie raised a hand to shield her eyes, blinking at the brightness of the Great Sun.</em></p>
<p><em>When her eyes adjusted, she gave a gasp of awe-filled wonder.  They were standing near the top of the steep, dark mountainside of Fey’Bahren, the tallest volcano in the majestic Feyls range that formed the northern border of the Fading Lands. Below, the rippling golden grasses of the Plains of Corunn spread out for miles.  She drank in the breathtaking scenery, which seemed at once familiar yet new, like a forgotten memory, freshly renewed. </em></p>
<p><em>“Oh, Rain,” she breathed.  “It’s so beautiful.”</em></p>
<p><em>Beside her, magic gathered as Rain summoned the Change. </em></p>
<p><em>Ellysetta’s body tingled as the surge of energy swept around and through her.  A fine gray mist billowed about him, about them both, and she threw back her head on a swell of pleasure so intense it bordered on pain.  Though it was Rain, not she, who was the shapeshifter, she felt his body dissolve and expand as if it were her own, felt the echo of awareness as his Fey senses grew even more acute. Fur sprouted, wings spread, claws speared the rock.</em></p>
<p><em>Moments later the mist cleared, and a magnificent death-black tairen with huge lavender eyes crouched on the ledge where Rain Tairen Soul, the Fey king and Ellysetta’s betrothed, had stood.  The tairen spread his enormous ebony wings, gathered strength in his haunches, and sprang into the air with an echoing roar. </em></p>
<p><em>Behind him, standing alone on the ledge, still trapped in her human form, she cried out, “Rain, come back! Don’t leave me!”</em></p>
<p>* * *</p>
<p>Ellysetta woke with her heart thumping and tears cooling on her cheeks.  Another dream, one that seemed so real.  The emotions still held her heart clutched tight, making her want to weep in despair for the dying tairen and the terrible, grieving emptiness that struck when Rain took to the air and abandoned her on that ledge.</p>
<p><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">**Another nightmare, </span></em>shei’tani<em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">?**</span></em> The familiar sound of Rain’s Spirit voice, low and husky with sleep, sounded in her mind.  An arm tightened around her waist. There was a warm, heavy weight pressed against her in her narrow bed—and it was most definitely <em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">not</span></em> her twin sisters, Lillis and Lorelle, cuddling up with her as they sometimes did.</p>
<p>She turned her head slowly, and her breath stalled in her lungs.</p>
<p>For the first time in the last five days, there was no little courtship gift beside her when she woke.  There was, instead, a great big one.  All black leather, white skin and inky hair, Rain lay beside her on her narrow bed, his long limbs draped over her.</p>
<p>Thinking she must still be dreaming, she closed her eyes, inhaled, opened them again.</p>
<p>He was still there, solid and warm, his face pressed to her neck.</p>
<p>She should leap up and get dressed before her mother came in and found her like this, but she couldn’t seem to move her limbs.  Instead, she lay there, staring at him in dazed wonder.  Through her bedroom window the first pale rays of the rising Great Sun shone down upon them.  Dawn was breaking, and Rain Tairen Soul was in her bed.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>GUEST BLOG: Hunky, Hot &amp; Heroic, Oh My! by C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/guest-blog-hunky-hot-heroic-oh-my-by-c-l-wilson/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/guest-blog-hunky-hot-heroic-oh-my-by-c-l-wilson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Oct 2010 15:00:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Guests and Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crown of Crystal Flame]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://goodbadandunread.com/?p=12113</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Thank you TGTBTU for having me here today!  I’m so thrilled to visit the Duck Pond again, especially to celebrate the end of what has truly been a writing era for me.  The release of Crown of Crystal Flame, fifth and final book of the Tairen Soul series, brings closure to a story that has [...]]]></description>
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<p>Thank you TGTBTU for having me here today!  I’m so thrilled to visit the Duck Pond again, especially to celebrate the end of what has truly been a writing era for me.  The release of <a title="Crown of Crystal Flame" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062018965/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Crown of Crystal Flame</em></a>, fifth and final book of the Tairen Soul series, brings closure to a story that has been part of my life for more than a decade!</p>
<p>In 1999, when I typed the first words of the very first scene and a character named Rainier vel’En Daris, Rain Dragon Soul (the tairen were dragons then) appeared on the page, I had no idea how epic the scope of the story would eventually become.  I initially thought the story could be told in a single (albeit long) book.  Boy, was I ever wrong!  (Though I stand firm by my statement that this story could have been a trilogy – assuming each book was as long as my original Tairen Soul manuscript, which became <a title="Lord of the Fading Lands" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023020/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Lord of the Fading Lands</em></a> and <a title="Lady of Light and Shadows" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023012/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Lady of Light and Shadows</em></a>.)</p>
<p>The problem, you see, is that I kept meeting interesting people—among them gorgeous, heroic Fey warriors—whom I wanted to know more about.</p>
<p><a href="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/33515_gal.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12119" title="33515_gal" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/33515_gal.jpg" alt="" width="206" height="135" /></a>I lurve me a good hero (or heroines for that matter) – especially heroes of the “larger than life” variety!  It’s part of the reason I adore romance—and one of the reasons I love fantasy, fairy tales, and other “heroic” fiction.</p>
<p>I’m not a particular fan of the celebrated heroes of old—the conquerors, the glory-hounds, or even the perfect prince charmings.  <a title="Odysseus" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odysseus" target="_blank">Odysseus</a> cheated on his faithful wife <a title="Penelope" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penelope" target="_blank">Penelope</a>.  <a title="Alexander the Great" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_the_Great" target="_blank">Alexander</a> invaded and conquered neighboring kingdoms for his own aggrandizement.  <a title="Jason the Argonaut" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason" target="_blank">Jason</a> tossed aside <a title="Medea" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medea" target="_blank">Medea</a> for a politically advantageous union (though, granted, the murderous Medea didn’t deserve a happy ending).  And I can’t think of a single perfect prince in the old fairy tales whose ideal mate was anything less than the fairest in the land—as well as being the sweetest, most demure, and most long-suffering angelic being ever born.</p>
<p>Physical attraction (beauty) is always a plus—and often the initial draw that brings two people together.  But staying power requires something much deeper and more lasting than physical beauty.<a href="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/Daniel-Day-Lewis-Last-of-the-Mohicans-C10103887.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-12121 alignright" title="Daniel-Day-Lewis---Last-of-the-Mohicans--C10103887" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/Daniel-Day-Lewis-Last-of-the-Mohicans-C10103887.jpg" alt="" width="167" height="206" /></a></p>
<p>Sure, give me hot! Sure, give me hunky! But above all, give me a true hero!  He can have his faults, and he can make his mistakes, but at the end of the day, he will stand for what’s right—even if it costs him everything.   (And if we get a dose of smokin’ hotness on top of that, so much the better!)</p>
<p>Some of my all-time-favorite heroic characters from books and movies include:</p>
<ul>
<li>Hawkeye from Last of the      Mohicans (and for the hunk factor, who can beat Daniel Day-Lewis in a loin      cloth? Yum!)  My favorite line from      the movie: “I will find you! No matter what it takes!”</li>
<li>John Thornton from North      &amp; South by Elizabeth Gaskell.  A      mill owner who built his fortune up from nothing, only to lose everything      because he would not risk the payroll of his mill workers in a risky      speculation scheme. My favorite line from the BBC TV series (besides just      about every word uttered by Richard Armitage, that is): “Look back. Look      back at me.”</li>
<li>Tom Hanks in Saving      Private Ryan, Tom Hanks in Apollo 13.</li>
<li>Russell Crowe as Maximus      in Gladiator.</li>
<li>Sidney Poitier in To Sir      With Love.</li>
<li>Ripley (played by      Sigourney Weaver) in the movie Aliens (OK, she’s a heroine, but she is      everything a hero should be in this movie!)</li>
</ul>
<p><a href="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/john-thornton.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12118" title="john thornton" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/john-thornton.jpg" alt="" width="175" height="150" /></a>My list was about three times longer – and growing – before I decided to cut for brevity’s sake.</p>
<p>From my own books, besides Rain and Ellysetta, I’d have to say Bel, Gaelen, Shan, Elfeya, and Melliandra all rank high up on my hero meter.</p>
<p>What about you?  Who are some of your favorite heroes (or heroines?) in books, movies, or TV?  What do you find most heroic about that character?</p>
<p><strong>Author’s Note:</strong> Though I wanted to keep today’s blog fun and lighthearted, I don’t want to leave TGTBTU today without a few words of a more serious nature.</p>
<p>9/11 changed my story substantially.  The world of Eloran became more than an entertaining fantasy world to me.  It became a place I went to work out the anger and emotion bottled inside me. A place I went to examine what I truly believe about right and wrong, good and evil.</p>
<p>Most of all, it became a world where I could write about larger-than-life heroes battling seemingly insurmountable odds to defend their loved ones and their world.</p>
<p>The first book in the series, <em>Lord the Fading Lands</em>, I dedicated to my father, Ray Richter, with the words, “Every person should have a hero.  You’ve always been mine.” The last book I dedicated to my husband, Kevin Wilson, because for the last five years, he has single-handedly shouldered the burden of supporting our family so that I could quit my job and dedicate my time to writing.</p>
<p>But every book, from the first to the fifth and each one in between, has also been dedicated in my heart to the everyday heroes among us: the brave men and women of the US Armed Forces, local law enforcement, fire departments, and other emergency response personnel.  Because they shoulder the burden of defending our freedom and keeping us safe.</p>
<p>So to you, the real heroes, and to your families who sacrifice so much so you can be there for the rest of us, I want to say thank you from the bottom of my heart.  God bless you.  And in the words of the Fey, May the Light always shine on your Path and keep you safe from harm.</p>
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		<title>GUEST AUTHOR DAY: Celebrating with C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/guest-author-day-celebrating-with-c-l-wilson/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/guest-author-day-celebrating-with-c-l-wilson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Oct 2010 14:00:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Guests and Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crown of Crystal Flame]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lord of the Fading Lands]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://goodbadandunread.com/?p=11745</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today is the official release of C.L. Wilson&#8217;s Crown of Crystal Flame, the fifth book in her wildly popular and beautifully written Tarien Soul series. I have been a fan of this series since Book 1, Lord of the Fading Lands, and not once has Ms. Wilson let me down with her storytelling, her characters, [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062018965/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Crown of Crystal Flame" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062018965.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="100" height="160" /></a>Today is the official release of C.L. Wilson&#8217;s <a title="Crown of Crystal Flame" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062018965/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Crown of Crystal Flame</em></a>, the fifth book in her wildly popular and beautifully written Tarien Soul series. I have been a fan of this series since Book 1, <a title="Lord of the Fading Lands" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023020/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Lord of the Fading Lands</em></a>, and not once has Ms. Wilson let me down with her storytelling, her characters, her prose, and her emotion in all five books. So I wanted to celebrate with this hard-working, dedicated, and talented author, introduce her to those of you who may have yet to discover her and her books , and to also take a look back over the series as a whole.</p>
<p><a href="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/clwilson.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-12106 alignright" title="clwilson" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/clwilson.jpg" alt="" width="200" height="194" /></a>I&#8217;ve, of course, read and reviewed all five of these books, and I never could do it justice with my woefully inadequate descriptions. I don&#8217;t think there&#8217;s a review out there that has captured the essence, the power, the beauty, and the emotion interwoven into each word, each page, each chapter, each book. All a reviewer can do with stories like these is hopefully give you enough <em>something</em> to pique your interest, to stir your heart, to turn on your curiosity to want to read them.</p>
<p>Thus, another reason I wanted to celebrate with you and C.L. today is in the hopes you might just want to make an extra run to the bookstore to finally have in hand these extraordinary books, especially now that all five are on the shelves. Ms. Wilson will be with us throughout the day, so if you&#8217;ve got questions after reading about her or going through the excerpts and reviews we&#8217;re going to share with you, leave a comment on any of the posts and we&#8217;ll make sure you get an answer.</p>
<p>I do want to tell you a little about C.L. Wilson and her books.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023020/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Lord of the Fading Lands" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062023020.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="100" height="160" /></a>Like most authors, she started writing when she was very young, inspired by stories her mother would read to her. Then later she was inspired by JRR Tolkien and Ann McCaffrey to weave her own fantasy world, even going so far as to create the language spoken by her characters. She says fans will come up to her and actually speak Feyen to her during a book signing or other engagement.</p>
<p>But before that happened, Ms. Wilson did the usual sending <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023012/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignright" title="Lady of Light and Shadows" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062023012.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a>manuscripts to publishers. And getting prompt rejection letters for all her stories, and, believe it or not, she even got a number of rejections for Tairen Soul. When I was lucky to have lunch with C.L. in San Francisco at the 2008 RWA conference, that&#8217;s a question I asked. I couldn&#8217;t believe someone out there had really turned her original book down. She looked straight at me, wide-eyed, and said, &#8220;You betcha.&#8221; I sure hope those people have found their brains since that time!</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023004/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="King of Sword and Sky" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062023004.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a>During this time C.L. also began to send her works in progress out to various contests. She was hoping for feedback rather than those darned rejection letters. However, the list is long and elite of the contest wins these books have won both before and after publication. There are many readers out there today who are quite happy that someone in the publishing industry finally woke up and smelled the coffee concerning C.L.&#8217;s original manuscript.</p>
<p>That original manuscript became two books, splitting the 1000 pages into easier-to-handle volumes, and Ms. Wilson was contracted to write more in the series, an additional two books. But the series seemed to take on a life of its own, Ms. Wilson&#8217;s characters wanted control, and, thus, the fifth book in the series was born.</p>
<p><a href="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/image011.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-12127 alignright" title="Tairen's Play" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/image011.jpg" alt="" width="159" height="207" /></a>Once readers were introduced to Rain and Ellysetta, the Fey, the Tairen, even the Mages of Eld, a literal snowball began. The books began to appear in hardcover. They were translated into other languages. A well-known artist even painted her rendition of the series fire-breathing, winged cats. C.L. says, &#8220;It&#8217;s as                                   if <a title="Heather Carr" href="http://www.darkparadise.org/" target="_blank">Heather Carr</a> lifted the [images] straight from my imagination and                                   transferred [them] to canvas.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fantasy, love and romance, good and evil, death and rebirth, family are just the short list of what you&#8217;ll read in this series of books. Ms. Wilson has created a world with characters and a language all its own, with a power and beauty that will make you cheer, cry, groan, shout, smile, laugh, and will keep you turning page after page hour after hour. There&#8217;s not much more a reader can ask for.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Queen of Song and Souls" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960604.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="97" height="160" /></a>Enjoy talking with C.L. today, reading previous reviews and excerpts as well as those of <em>Crown of Crystal Flame</em>, comment and ask questions. We have a full day planned for you, so come back often, things will be moving very quickly!</p>
<p>We also have a contest or two with prizes from C.L. &#8211; a signed copy of <em>Crown of Crystal Flame</em> and a few items of merchandise from the forthcoming Tairen’s Lair online store -  a Fading Lands T-shirt, a Steli coffee-mug, a shei’tanitsa claiming vow wall plaque. One comment per person per post today, please, for the contests &#8211; you may comment more than once per post for discussion purposes, but only your first comment will count for each contest. You never know where we&#8217;ll pick a winner from!</p>
<p>Have fun!</p>
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		<title>EXCERPT: Crown of Crystal Flame by C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/excerpt-crown-of-crystal-flame-by-c-l-wilson/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/excerpt-crown-of-crystal-flame-by-c-l-wilson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Oct 2010 13:00:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Excerpt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Quacking About]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guests and Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://goodbadandunread.com/?p=11743</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson&#8217;s Tairen Soul series is one of those you will never forget. It&#8217;s a series of epic proportions on a number of levels covering five books, filled with an author&#8217;s imagination and heartfelt writing. Crown of Crystal Flame brings the saga of Rain Tairen Soul and Ellysetta to an end with sweeping, hard-fought battles [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062018965/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Crown of Crystal Flame" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062018965.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="100" height="160" /></a>C.L. Wilson&#8217;s Tairen Soul series is one of those you will never forget. It&#8217;s a series of epic proportions on a number of levels covering five books, filled with an author&#8217;s imagination and heartfelt writing.</p>
<p><em>Crown of Crystal Flame</em> brings the saga of Rain Tairen Soul and Ellysetta to an end with sweeping, hard-fought battles against evil mages, dragons, and a score of other creatures, as well as a few supposedly on the side of good; with emotion so bone deep from page to page a reader doesn&#8217;t know whether they&#8217;re coming or going; with love and romance that you hope culminates in a life finally free of hopelessness and betrayal. And so much more.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;ve not read this amazing series yet, take a moment to be awed by this excerpt, moved to pick up the first book to discover these strong and resilient characters and the story they live to fullest. You won&#8217;t stop reading until you&#8217;re read every last word in the series.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>A Song of Love won her heart.<br />
A Song of Darkness haunted her soul.<br />
A Song in the Dance would seal her fate.<br />
</em></p>
<p>Seers had long foreseen an extraordinary destiny for Ellysetta                                   Baristani. Already she had won the heart of the Fey King?the                                   magnificent Rain, ever her ally, eternally her love. She had                                   saved the offspring of the magical tairen and fought beside                                   her legendary mate against the armies of Eld.</p>
<p>But the most powerful–and dangerous–Verse of her                                   Song had yet to be sung.</p>
<p>As the final battle draws nigh and evil tightens its grip upon                                   her soul–will Ellysetta secure the world for Light or                                   plunge it into Darkness for all eternity? As she and Rain fight                                   for each other, side by side, will they find a way to complete                                   their truemate bond and defeat the evil High Mage of Eld before                                   it&#8217;s too late, or must they make the ultimate sacrifice to save                                   their world?</p>
<blockquote>
<p style="text-align: center;">Prologue</p>
<p>Northern Celieria ~ 24<sup>th</sup> day of Verados</p>
<p>Death raked like a knife across Ellysetta Baristani’s empathic soul. Talisa Barrial diSebourne was dead.  Killed by the Tairen venom in the deadly red <em>Fey’cha</em> her husband, Colum, had thrown at her Fey truemate, Adrial vel Arquinas.</p>
<p>Of Colum diSebourne—Talisa’s husband—there was no sign.</p>
<p>The scorch of ozone, the odor of powerful magic released with explosive force, still hung heavy in the air.  No one needed to draw Ellysetta a picture.  She’d felt Colum’s hate-filled fury, felt Talisa’s death.  Adrial’s wild, deadly Rage.  She’d sensed the moment Colum’s anger turned to terror, seen the unmistakable explosion of Adrial’s magic, and then….nothing.  A vacuum of emotion, the utter stunned silence of disbelief, followed at last by grief and accusation and a chaotic whirl of unchecked thoughts and feelings.</p>
<p>Colum had discovered his wife returning from the forest with her Fey lover, and he’d set into motion the series of events that had led to this: Talisa and Adrial dead.  Colum…simply <em>gone</em>.</p>
<p>“My son.”  Great Lord Sebourne—Colum’s father—stepped into the open space where his son had been.  His eyes swept the clearing.  His jaw thrust out aggressively.  “Where’s my son?”</p>
<p>“He’s gone,” Talisa’s father, the Great Lord Cannevar Barrial, answered in a bleak voice.  “They’re all gone.”   His sons Luce, Parsis and Severn stood in stricken silence beside him.  He swiped at the tears brimming in his eyes and glared as his neighbor.  “I hope you’re jaffing satisfied, Sebourne.”</p>
<p>Kneeling on the ground beside the bodies of Talisa and his brother, Rowan vel Arquinas fixed grief-stricken gaze on Ellysetta.  “Please Feyreisa.  Save them.  If anyone can, it’s you.”</p>
<p>Rowan’s ragged whisper spurred her to action.  She raced past the snarling Great Lords and dropped to her knees in the trampled grass and dirt beside the fallen truemates.</p>
<p>“Rain, try the shadar horn on Talisa,” she commanded.  A gift from the Elf  King, Galad Hawksheart, the curling horn from the magical horses called shadar was reputed to be an antidote to any poison—even irreversibly lethal tairen venom.</p>
<p>“Ellysetta,” Rain murmured.  He laid a hand on her shoulder. “It’s too late, <em>shei’tani</em>.  They’re already gone.”</p>
<p>Her gaze shot up, pinning his.  “I have to at least try to save them,” she cried.  “You know I must.”</p>
<p>Compassion and understanding softened his expression.  “There’s nothing to be done.  They have passed beyond the Veil.  Even if you could call their souls back into their bodies, you would only summon them as demons, not as the friends we knew</p>
<p>The sounds of shouting made them turn.  Lord Sebourne and Lord Barrial were at each other’s throats, swords drawn.  All their men had blades in hand as well, ready—even eager—to spill their own countrymen’ s blood<em> </em></p>
<p>“What are you thinking?” Ellysetta cried.  “Haven’t you had your fill of death?”</p>
<p>Though the Fey-Celierian treaty that prohibited Fey from manipulating of mortal thoughts with their magic—and though that was precisely the crime for which Adrial vel Arquinas had been sentenced to death—Ellysetta still did it.  She regarded the rage-filled men spun a weave of peace upon them.</p>
<p>“Sheathe your swords,” she commanded, infusing her voice with compulsion. “There will be no more killing here today.  Lord Barrial, Rowan, tend to your dead.  Lord Sebourne, mourn your son.  For the sake of the dear ones each of us have lost, let there be peace between us.”</p>
<p>Though Sebourne sheathed his sword, not even Ellysetta’s weave was enough to still his anger completely.</p>
<p>“Peace?” he spat.  “There will be peace when Celieria and her king are free of Fey manipulations and control.”  And then he turned to the king and declared, “Sebourne will not fight beside these Fey <em>rultsharts</em>. I will not spill one more drop of Sebourne blood on their behalf, or trust them at my back.  I pray gods you soon find the strength to cut free of their strings.”</p>
<p>Raising his voice, Great Lord Sebourne shouted, “Warriors of Sebourne!  Mount up.  We ride for Moreland!”</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Chapter One</p>
<p>I watch my loved ones weep with sorrow,<br />
deaths silent torment of no tomorrow.<br />
I feel their hearts breaking, I sense their despair.<br />
united in misery, the grief that they share.</p>
<p>How do I show that, I am not gone&#8230;<br />
but the essence of life’s everlasting song<br />
Why do they weep? Why do they cry?<br />
I’m alive in the wind and I am soaring high.</p>
<p>I am sparkling light dancing on streams,<br />
a moment of warmth in the rays of sunbeams.<br />
The coolness of rain as it falls on your face,<br />
the whisper of leaves as wind rushes with haste</p>
<p>~ Eternal Song, a requiem by Avian of Celieria</p>
<p>Celeria  ~ Kreppes<br />
24<sup>th</sup> Day of Verados</p>
<p>“The bodies of Talisa and Adrial have been sent back to the elements,” Rain announced, speaking to the top of Dorian’s bent head.</p>
<p>After Talisa and Adrial’s deaths earlier in the day, while the King’s Army continued marching to the great walled city-fortress of Kreppes to prepare for war while Rain and the Fey had stayed behind with Great Lord Barrial and his sons to say their final goodbyes and return the bodies of their loved ones to the elements from whence they came.</p>
<p>Now, as he and Ellysetta stood before Celieria’s king in the chambers Great Lord Barrial had surrendered for Dorian’s use, Rain feared that the deaths of Adrial, Talisa and Colum diSebourne on the fields of northern Celieria today had destroyed far more than three lives.</p>
<p>Only one month ago, the Fey had learned that the evil High Mage of Eld intended to unleash a terrible army upon Celieria.  An army one of his Mages had compared to the mythic Army of Darkness, a world-conquering force of millions.  Rain and Ellysetta had spent weeks trying to cobble together an alliance to combat the threat.  But now, thanks to what had happened with Talisa, Adrial, and Colum, the small army they’d managed to assemble was threatening to come apart at the seams.</p>
<p>King Dorian X of Celieria, who had not risen when Rain and Ellysetta entered, continued to scan the sheets of parchment in his hand as if Rain had not spoken, while leaving the king and queen of the Fey to stand before him like chastised children summoned to the schoolmaster’s office.</p>
<p>Irritation flickered through Rain.  Dorian had a right to his anger—and Rain knew he deserved reproach for hiding Adrial’s continued his presence in Celieria City from Celieria’s king—but he would tolerate no discourtesy towards Ellysetta.</p>
<p>“The Fey stand ready to fight,” Rain continued, “but before this battle begins, King Dorian, the Feyreisa and I must know what impact our recent mutual loss will have on our alliance.”</p>
<p>The hands on the parchment froze.  The Celierian king’s head lifted.  Eyes hard as polished stones clashed with Rain’s gaze.</p>
<p>“It’s a little late for such concerns, don’t you think?”</p>
<p>The quiet venom in Dorian’s tone surprised Rain.  Since meeting the descendant of Marissya and Gaelen’s sister, Marikah vol Serranis, Rain had never regarded Dorian as much more than a too-weak, too-mortal product of a great Fey bloodline.  Fey in name only, with little to recommend him as either a strong leader or a seasoned warrior.  But there was a new edge to Dorian that Rain had never seen before.  A flinty glitter in his eyes and resolute hardness to his jaw.</p>
<p>Trusting, accommodating Dorian vol Serranis Torreval had grown steel in his spine—and with it a decidedly less favorable view of the Fey.</p>
<p>Rain spread his hands in a placating gesture.  “King Dorian—”</p>
<p>“You knew!”  Dorian kicked back his chair and surged to his feet.  “All this time, you knew about Adrial and Talisa.  You knew Adrial and the others hadn&#8217;t gone back to the Fading Lands.   Knew they were using their magic to hide their presence from Talisa&#8217;s husband.  You knew, and you condoned it.  Not only that—you participated in their deception!”  He jabbed a finger in Rain’s direction.  “You, who posture and pride yourself on Fey honor, intentionally set out to deceive me, the Sebournes and the Barrials.  Both Border Lords, vital in defending Celeria against the Eld.  Was your talk about the Mages gathering strength again just talk, too?”</p>
<p>Rain’s skin flushed.  “I know how this must seem—”</p>
<p>“<em>Seem?</em>”  Dorian gave a harsh, humorless laugh. “You spoke so eloquently about honoring our customs, holding our marriage vows as sacred as your own, and all the while, you plotted to rob a man of his wife. Is this the measure of Fey honor?  Is this how low and worthless it has become—or is it merely an indicator of how low and worthless <em>your</em> honor has become?”</p>
<p>At Rain’s side, Ellysetta bristled, but he silenced her with a small touch of his hand.   He deserved Dorian’s anger.</p>
<p>“You counted on my trust…on my belief in your honor,” Dorian continued hotly.  “You manipulated me like the puppet my own nobles have accused me of being.  You used my faith in the goodness of the Fey—even my love for my Aunt, Marissya, and ties of kinship—to deceive me.  You are the reason three people died today!   How I wish I’d heeded Tenn v’En Eilan’s warning about you!”</p>
<p>“That’s enough!” Ellysetta exclaimed.  Her green eyes shot sparks.  “How dare you lay full blame for today at his feet?  You, who bear as much blame as he?”</p>
<p>“Ellysetta, <em>las</em>.”  Rain pulled her closer, half afraid of what she might do to Dorian.  “Dorian has a right to his anger.  I <em>did</em> manipulate and deceive him.  And I will bear the weight of Adrial and Talisa&#8217;s deaths, as I bear the weight of all the lives lost to my sword and to my flame.”  Silently, he added, <em>**Perhaps Tenn was right, and I truly have lost my way.**</em> Had he fallen from the Bright Path and been too blinded by his love for Ellysetta and his hatred of the Eld to realize it?</p>
<p>She whirled on him, anger eclipsed by shock and repudiation of his silent confession.  <em>**Rain, nei.  Don’t even think that way.  You are a champion of Light.  Don’t you ever doubt it,**</em> She clasped his face in her hands and stared fiercely into his eyes, as if, by sheer force of will, she could make him believe her.</p>
<p>Turning back to Dorian, she said in a calmer voice, “In his sorrow and guilt over today’s terrible loss, my <em>shei’tan</em> allows you to heap blame upon him without protest. But I will not.  What great evil has he done? He allowed a dying man to spend the last months of his life watching over the woman he loved.  If that is a crime, you should pray to the gods you would have the heart to be as guilty as he!”</p>
<p>For the first time since they’d entered this chamber, Dorian looked uncertain.  “Vel Arquinas was dying?”</p>
<p>“Ellysetta,” Rain murmured a low warning.  The high price of <em>shei’tanitsa</em> was a dangerous truth Fey never revealed to outsiders.</p>
<p>“Aiyah, he was” she confirmed.  <em>**I&#8217;m sorry, Rain, but it’s long past time he learned the truth.  He is part Fey, after all.**</em> To Dorian, she continued aloud, “From the moment you upheld Talisa&#8217;s Celierian marriage, Adrial’s life was over.  You did not realize it, but by denying him his <em>shei’tani</em>, you condemned him to death”</p>
<p>“Don&#8217;t be ridiculous.” Dorian scowled and spun away, stalking over to the large window that looked out over the Heras River and the night-shrouded darkness of Eld.  “Despite what the poets say, a broken heart never killed anyone.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps not among mortals, King Dorian, but the same is not true for the Fey.  Once a fey finds his truemate, he has only months to complete the bond or he will die.”</p>
<p>Dorian stopped in his tracks.  He turned, glancing uncertainly between the pair of them.  &#8220;Is this true?&#8221; he asked Rain.</p>
<p>Rain sighed, then nodded.  “<em>Aiyah</em>, it is true.”</p>
<p>“But you have yet to complete your bond with the Feyreisa.  Are you telling me <em>you</em> are dying?”</p>
<p>“I am.”</p>
<p>Nonplussed, Dorian leaned back against the window, his hands gripping the stone sill.  “How long do you have?”</p>
<p>“Not long,” Rain confessed.  Ellysetta’s hand crept into his.  He squeezed her fingers gently.  “Weeks perhaps.  No more than a month or two.”</p>
<p>“If this is true, why is this the first I’ve ever heard of it?”</p>
<p>Rain sighed.  “Ellysetta once asked me the same question.   My answer to her was the same as it is to you now: if you had so great a vulnerability—would you let it be known to those who might wish you harm?”</p>
<p>“You think I wish you harm?”</p>
<p>“You?  <em>Nei</em>.  But you are king of a people who have shown increasing animosity towards the Fey.  It seemed wiser just to keep our secrets safe.”</p>
<p>“Knowing this,” Ellysetta said, “can you now understand why Rain acted as he did?  It’s true he allowed our Spirit masters to weave the illusion of Adrial and Rowan leaving the city while in truth they remained behind with Talisa’s quintet, cloaked in invisibility weaves to avoid detection.  And <em>aiyah</em>, he kept the secret of their presence from you so that no blame would fall upon you. But he didn’t do it so Adrial could steal another man’s wife.  He did it so Adrial could spend the last days of his life close to the woman he loved.”</p>
<p>Dorian recovered his composure and regarded them both with a mix of suspicion and defensive ire.  &#8220;Even if he was dying, that doesn&#8217;t excuse vel Arquinas for what he did.  To manipulate diSebourne&#8217;s mind the way he did&#8230;to run off with the man’s wife.  Those are not the actions of an honorable man—Fey or mortal.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Nei,&#8221; Rain agreed.  &#8220;They are not.  And that is precisely why Adrial would have embraced <em>sheisan&#8217;dahlein</em>, the Fey honor death, and why no Fey will attempt to avenge him.  What Adrial did was wrong.  None of us will deny that.  But his brother Rowan tells us he was going to do the honorable thing.  He was going to leave his <em>shei&#8217;tani</em> with her husband and return to the Fading Lands.”</p>
<p>Dorian&#8217;s shoulders slumped.  &#8220;You should have come to me.  Trusted me.  If I’d known the price of the matebond, I could have tried to do something to spare vel Arquinas’s life.  Now it’s too late.  Three lives are lost—one of them the only heir to a Great House.  Sebourne and his friends will make certain I regret my indulgence of the Fey.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I do understand, Dorian, and I will do all that I can to make amends, but we have a far greater threat than Sebourne’s vengeance to worry about now.  Hawksheart warned us the Eld would attack tonight.&#8221;</p>
<p>“Tonight? I thought you said the attack would come next week?”</p>
<p>“Apparently, things have changed.”</p>
<p>“How many Elves did Hawksheart send to our aid?  If the attack does come tonight, will they get here in time?”</p>
<p>Rain took a breath.  This, even more than Dorian’s anger, was the part of this meeting he’d been dreading.   “The Elves are not coming, Dorian.”</p>
<p>“They’re not?” The king’s brow furrowed.  “Lord Hawksheart thinks the Danae alone will be enough against an army as large as the one you expect?”</p>
<p>“We never met with the Danae.  Hawksheart’s Elves intercepted us before we crossed Celieria’s borders.  He promised he would speak to the Danae on our behalf, but even if they agree to come, it will be days, possibly weeks before they reach Kreppes.”</p>
<p>“Then we are doomed.”  Dorian began to pace.</p>
<p>“The keep is heavily guarded, and the shields are strong,” Rain said.  “Between your twelve thousand men, Lord Barrials’ two, and my three thousand Fey, we&#8217;ll give the Eld a good fight, I promise you.  The Mages will not claim one fingerspan of Celierian soil without paying a high price.”</p>
<p>“Don’t patronize me,” Dorian snapped.  “I’ve read the legends about the Army of Darkness.  It was millions strong, they say.”</p>
<p>“Legends often grow over time.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but even if this Mage has built an army only a tenth that size, our eighteen thousand would still be outnumbered twenty to one.  If the Elves and the Danae had agreed to fight, we might have stood a chance.  <em>Might</em>.  But now&#8230;.”</p>
<p>“Now, if this Mage truly <em>has</em> built an army to rival the legend, the best we can hope is to hold back the tide and kill as many of them as possible before we are overrun,” Rain agreed baldly.  “And pray our defeat will spur the Elves to action, as our pleas for aid could not.”</p>
<p>“You must hold out some hope of success,” Dorian insisted.  “You would never bring your shei’tani here, if you thought defeat were certain.&#8221;</p>
<p>“She is here because I am, but if the situation becomes dire, her quintet will take her to safety.”</p>
<p>At his side, Ellysetta went stiff as a poker.  <em>**Rain, I&#8217;m not leaving you.**</em></p>
<p><em>**We will talk later.**</em> He would not look at her.</p>
<p><em>**Nei, we won&#8217;t.  Because there is nothing to talk about.  I won&#8217;t leave you.  You&#8217;re mad if you think I would.**</em></p>
<p>The corner of his mouth quirked, and despite the seriousness of their situation, he cast her a quick glance, sparkling with wry humor.  <em>**I believe we&#8217;ve already established that, shei&#8217;tani, and I&#8217;m getting madder by the day.**</em></p>
<p>She glowered.  <em>**That&#8217;s not funny.**</em></p>
<p>Dorian paced across the room to the glassed window carved into the thick stone walls of the keep&#8217;s central tower.  Thick swaths of embroidered velvet hung across the glass, buffering the room against the chill of the north&#8217;s snowy winters.  He pulled back one of the hangings and peered out across the torch-lit northern battlements into the darkness of Eld.</p>
<p>“It is late.  My scouts have reported no armies on the horizon.   My generals have already sought their beds.  I suggest you do the same. If an attack does come tonight, &#8217;tis better we face them rested and ready to fight.”  Dorian returned to stand beside his desk.  “Lord Barrial has ordered his servants to prepare a suite for you and the Feyreisa.  Her quintet may stay with you, of course, and you may post another quintet to stand watch with the tower guard.  But have the rest of your troops make camp outside the walls.  I am not the only Celierian unsettled by today’s events.  Emotions are running high, and I prefer to avoid any potential conflicts.”</p>
<p>“Of course.”  Rain gave the brief half-nod that served as a courtesy bow between kings and held out a wrist for Ellysetta&#8217;s hand.  “We have no wish to cause you further distress.”</p>
<p>* * *</p>
<p>After leaving the king, Rain and Ellysetta went out to the Fey encampment—Rain to meet with his generals and Ellysetta to ease what she could of Rowan’s grief.  One of Lord Barrial’s servants was waiting for them upon their return and showed them to a spacious suite in the inner fortress’s west wing.</p>
<p>Now, secure behind the twenty-five fold weaves of her quintet and Kreppes’s own impressive shields that self-activated each night at sundown, Ellysetta lay in Rain’s arms in the center of the room’s opulent bed.  A warm fire crackled in the hearth, illuminating the room with flickering dance of shadows and firelight.</p>
<p>“How is Rowan?”  Rain stroked a hand through her unbound hair.</p>
<p>“Devastated.”  Her head rested on his chest.  She snuggled closer, needing the feel of his arm around her, the sound of his heart beating beneath her ear.  “The loss of his brother eats at his soul.  Bel offered to spin a Spirit weave to Rowan’s sister, but that only made things worse.  He couldn’t bear the thought of telling her their brother is gone.  He blames himself for Adrial’s death.  I don’t know how he could possibly think that.  None of this was his fault.”</p>
<p>“Grief isn’t always logical.  And with a Fey, it’s never mild. Our kind do not love in half measures.”</p>
<p>The Fey did nothing in half-measures.  That intensity of emotion was part of their appeal.  It made them the fiercest warriors, the staunchest allies, the most passionate lovers. The most devoted mates.</p>
<p>She ran a hand down his torso, fingertips stroking the silky smooth skin.  All she had to do was touch him to set her world to rights.</p>
<p>“I wove what peace on him I could,” she said, “but I’m worried about him.  There is a look in his eyes…a shadow I’ve never seen before.  Almost as if some part of him died with Adrial and the rest is only going through the motions of living.  When this battle starts, I don’t think he intends to live through it.”</p>
<p>“I will talk to him tomorrow.”</p>
<p>“Thank you.”  Rain knew loss.  He knew what it was to wish for death.  Ellysetta traced a pattern across the skin of his chest.  “Rain…”</p>
<p><em>“Aiyah?”</em></p>
<p>“About what you said earlier to Dorian.  The bit about me leaving if the battle grows grim.”</p>
<p>He caught her hand, stilled it.  “I’ve already commanded your quintet to take you to safety, when the time comes.”</p>
<p>She rolled away and propped herself up one elbow so she could see his face.</p>
<p>“Lord Hawksheart said we should stay together,” she reminded him. “‘Do not leave your mate’s side,’ he said.  ‘You hold each other to the Light,’ he said.  He said that we could only defeat the Darkness together.”</p>
<p>“He said many things.  Most of which I don’t trust.”</p>
<p>“I see.”  Ellysetta freed her hand from his and laid down on her back to stare up at the ceiling.  “So we kept information from Dorian for our own purposes, yet you expect him to forgive our transgressions and trust us as if nothing has ever happened.  But when it’s we who are deceived—when it’s Lord Galad keeping information from the Fey for his own purposes—somehow that makes <em>his</em> every word suspect?”</p>
<p>Dead silence fell over the room, broken only by the snap and pop of the logs on the fire.</p>
<p>Rain sat up, furs spilling into his lap as he twisted to face her.  Silky black hair spilled over his muscled shoulders.  His brows drew together.</p>
<p>“You think I have treated Dorian the way Hawksheart has treated us?”</p>
<p>She met his gaze.  “I think we decided which truths to tell him and which to keep secret, just as the Elves have done to us. So now he distrusts us. Just as we distrust the Elves.  Yet somehow we think he should just forget our deceptions and heed our advice without question—while you will not trust Lord Galad.”</p>
<p>Rain scowled.  “The two are not remotely comparable.  Hawksheart left your parents to suffer a thousand years of torment.  He sent gods knows how many people to their deaths.  He refuses to fight the Darkness he <em>knows</em> is coming.”</p>
<p>“And three people are dead because we let Adrial stay with his <em>shei’tani</em> and hide his presence from the Celierians.  And now, though you’ve been told we must both face the High Mage together, you want to send me away and ensure our defeat.”</p>
<p>“You are twisting the facts.  I want to keep you alive!  How is that so wrong?”</p>
<p>She sat up and put her arms around him.  “I don’t want to die, Rain.  But I won’t be sent away so you can sacrifice yourself.  You need me.”  She stroked her fingers through his hair, smoothing the long strands back from his beautiful face.  The bond madness was upon him.  He fought it every moment of the day, and without her close by, the battle was more difficult.    “And I need you, just as much.”</p>
<p>The last three weeks, they’d been each other’s constant companion, never apart for more than a few chimes, and tonight, when he met with his generals while she went to heal Rowan, she’d felt his absence acutely.  She’d come to rely on the strength she drew from him when he was near, just as she’d come to rely on Lord Hawksheart’s magical circlet of yellow Sentinel blooms to keep the Mage out of her dreams when she slept.  Just this last bell apart from him had left her feeling stretched thin.  She’d found herself constantly reaching for him through their bond threads, drawing his emotions to her and soothing him with her own.  Needing to know that he was close, that he was well, that she was not alone.</p>
<p>It frightened her, a little, how much she needed him.  How much she’d come to depend on the constant flow of strength and reassurance between them.</p>
<p>“Sending me away won’t save me, Rain.  Without you to keep me strong, it’s only a matter of time before the High Mage claims my soul.”  She already bore four of the six Mage Marks needed to enslave a soul, shadowy bruises upon the skin over her heart, invisible except in the presence of the forbidden Dark magic, Azrahn.  “You know that, even if you want to deny it.”</p>
<p>His face crumpled.  “I can’t lose you.”</p>
<p>“And that’s why you can’t send me away.   Because the only way you could ever truly lose me is if the Mage claims my soul.”  Two more Marks and she would be lost forever.  “Besides,” she added softly, “if you sent me away, where would I go?  You’re the only family I have left.”</p>
<p>Ellysetta was, essentially, an orphan.  Mama—Lauriana Baristani, her adoptive mother – was dead, killed by the Eld.  Papa and her two sisters, Lillis and Lorelle, were lost in the magical fog of the Faering Mists.  Her Fey parents, Shan and Elfeya v’En Celay, whom she had never met, had both been prisoners of the High Mage of Eld for the last thousand years.  Rain was the only family she had left.</p>
<p>His head bowed.  <em>Shei’tani</em>.  The word escaped his battered mind, filled with sorrow and despair.</p>
<p>She pulled him close, stroking his hair and back and he kissed her tenderly.  But when tenderness blossomed to passion and he would have borne her down upon the bed, she stopped him.</p>
<p>“If this is to be our last night together, <em>shei’tan</em>, I don’t want to spend it here, in a strange room in a cold castle on the borders.”</p>
<p>His brows rose.  “Then where would you have us go?”</p>
<p>“To the Fading Lands.” When he frowned in confusion, she lifted a hand.  The lavender glow of Spirit gathered in her palm. “I want to spend our last night in Dharsa, with our friends and family around us and the tairen singing from the rooftops and the scent of Amarynth in the air.”</p>
<p>Rain lips curved in understanding.  “I think, between the two of us, we can arrange that.”  His weave joined her own, threads merging and spilling out across the room.  The walls, the bed, all of Celieria faded away, replaced by the perfect beauty of Dharsa and the gardens near the golden Hall of Tairen.  Faerilas, the magic infused waters of the Fading Lands, burbled in exquisite marble fountains, and the air was redolent with the scent of magic, sweet with the perfumed scent of jasmine and honeyblossom and Amarynth, the flower of life.  The Fey were singing, the music rising into a soft evening sky.  Fairy flies winked and glittered amid the flowers and trees.</p>
<p>And there, standing in the great marble arches, stood Ellysetta’s family.  Mama and Papa and the twins.  And her Fey parents, Shan and Elfeya, healthy and whole and free, their faces alight with love.  Kieran and Kiel.  Adrial and Talisa.  Rain’s parents, Rajahl and Kiaria.  Sweet, shy, gentle Sariel dancing the Felah Baruk with the joyful Fey maidens and fierce-eyed Fey.</p>
<p>Rain and Ellysetta joined them.  They danced and they sang, and as the night deepened, they walked out into the perfumed gardens and made love beneath the stars.</p>
<p>And overhead, the sky was filled with tairen.</p>
<p>And the world was filled with joy.</p>
<p>* * *</p>
<p>The Faering Mists</p>
<p>Lillis Baristani had never been happier in her life.  Whatever magic this was in the Faering Mists, she never wanted to leave it.  She had spent every day glued to Mama’s side, sitting beside her on a wooden swing in the misty garden, cooking and laughing with her in the kitchen, lying with her head in Mama’s lap as Mama read to her at night. Everything she’d missed since Mama had died.  Everything she’d wished she could do again.</p>
<p>Every moment seemed perfect, enchanted.  And Mama was even more wonderful than Lillis could ever remember her being.  It was as if whatever had happened that day in the Cathedral of Light had changed Mama, stripped her of the fear and disapproval that had so often darkened her eyes.</p>
<p>Tonight, Lillis and Mama cuddled together on the suspended wooden swing Papa had installed on the back of their house, rocking gently as they watched the fairy flies dance across their garden, trailing glittering fairy fly dust in their wake.  As Lillis watched the little whorls and streamers of colorful light and rocked in Mama’s arms, she heard herself confess that she and Lorelle had revealed their magic to Papa and to the Fey.</p>
<p>The chime the words were out, she clapped a hand over her mouth and wished them back, but instead of delivering a sharp chide, Mama only smiled and stroked Lillis’s hair.  “It’s all right, kitling,” she said. “I should have told the truth myself long ago, but I was afraid.”</p>
<p>That made Lillis’s eyes go wide.  Mama?  Afraid?  But she never feared anything.  Lillis was the scaredy cat of the family. “What were you afraid of, Mama?”</p>
<p>“Oh, many things.”  Mama sighed.  “But mostly I was afraid that what happened to my sister might somehow happen to you and Lorelle.”</p>
<p>Lillis leaned back to look up at her mother in surprise.  “I never knew you had a sister.”</p>
<p>“She died long ago.”  Mama’s eyes were dark and sad.  “Her name was Bessinita…my sweet little Bess…and I loved her more than anything in the world.” Then Mama had told her how Bess had been a Fire weaver too, like Lorelle and Mama, only when Bess was two, she accidentally burned a neighbor’s house down.  The villagers had insisted on winding Bess—taking the baby out into the dark Verlaine forest and abandoning her there to die.</p>
<p>“What did you do?”</p>
<p>“There wasn’t anything I could do.  I wasn’t even as old as you are now.”  She rested her chin on the top of Lillis’s head.  “I prayed and prayed that someone would find her before the <em>lyrant</em> did, or if nothing else, that the Bright Lord would send his Lightmaidens to carry Bess away to the Haven of Light.”</p>
<p>Tears turned Lillis’s vision hazy.  “Poor little baby.  Poor little Bess.”</p>
<p>“That was why I was always so afraid of magic, kitling.  Not because I thought you or Lorelle were horrible for having magic, but because I was so afraid of what people would do if they knew.”</p>
<p>“But you’re not afraid anymore?”</p>
<p>Mama smiled gently.  “No, kitling.  When I let love be my guide, fear lost its power over me.”</p>
<p>“So you’re not mad at us for telling?” Lillis asked.</p>
<p>“Of course not.”  Mama pressed a kiss in Lillis’s curls.  “I’m very proud of you and Lorelle both, and I’m proud of Ellie too.  I love you all more than I can say.”</p>
<p>“I love you too, Mama.”  Lillis snuggled closer and closed her eyes in bliss.  Her arms squeezed tight around Mama’s neck, holding her close, and she breathed deep of the special scent that was Mama’s own, the scent of home and love and security where bad people never came and monsters never howled.  “I never want to lose you again.”</p>
<p>Mama caressed Lillis’s hair in slow, rhythmic strokes, and the beat of her heart thumped reassuringly beneath Lillis’s ear.  “I’ll always be with you, Lillipet. No matter what.  If ever you’re feeling alone or afraid, just remember that.  And remember this too: we are all the gods’ children.  All our gifts come from them, but it’s what we choose to do with those gifts that determines whether we walk in Light or Shadow.  When you see Ellie again, will you tell her that for me?  And tell her I said to let love, not fear, be her guide. Will you do that for me?”</p>
<p>“You can tell her yourself.  Once Kieran and Kiel get here, we can all go find Ellie together.”</p>
<p>Mama smiled.  “I think she’ll understand it better if it comes from you.  Will you promise me, kitling?”</p>
<p>Lillis frowned a little, but agreed with an obedient, “Yes, Mama.”</p>
<p>“And you won’t forget? No matter what?”</p>
<p>“No, Mama.”</p>
<p>Her reward was a kiss and another hug.  “That’s my sweet Lillipet.”</p>
<p>Lillis burrowed into her mother’s arms, closing her eyes in bliss as Mama’s love and warmth enveloped her and held her tight.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>REVIEW: Crown of Crystal Flame by C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/review-crown-of-crystal-flame-by-c-l-wilson/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2010/10/26/review-crown-of-crystal-flame-by-c-l-wilson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Oct 2010 06:00:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Avon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crown of Crystal Flame]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grade A]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guests and Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[October 2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Sandy M&#8217;s review of Crown of Crystal Flame (Tairen Soul, Book 5) by C.L. Wilson Fantasy Romance published by Avon 26 Oct 10 When I think back to 2007 when I received an ARC for review of the first book in this series, Lord of the Fading Lands, and I kept looking at the cover, [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062018965/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Crown of Crystal Flame" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0062018965.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="100" height="160" /></a>Sandy M&#8217;s review of <a title="Crown of Crystal Flame" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062018965/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><strong>Crown of Crystal Flame (Tairen Soul, Book 5)</strong></a> by <a title="C.L. Wilson" href="http://clwilson.com/" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson</a><br />
<em>Fantasy Romance published by Avon 26 Oct 10</em></p>
<p>When I think back to 2007 when I received an ARC for review of the first book in this series, <em><a title="Lord of the Fading Lands" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0062023020/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank">Lord of the Fading Lands</a>,</em> and I kept looking at the cover, telling myself &#8220;That&#8217;s fantasy, you&#8217;re not big on fantasy, you probably won&#8217;t like that book,&#8221; I&#8217;d put it aside to read something else, I can&#8217;t believe I might have missed the best books and best series to come along in a very long time. C.L. Wilson has written the book of her heart and readers have taken her story and her characters into theirs. This last book of the series is a perfect ending to the perfect series. I hate to see it end, but Ms. Wilson is now well into her journey as a best-selling author, so I know more good things &#8212; no, great things &#8212; will be forthcoming from her.</p>
<p>We go into this last book with Ellie still not completing her truemate bond with Rain. He is slowly dying, suffering madness without their bond. Of course, like any fan of this series, I&#8217;ve had my own ideas of what I&#8217;d like to see happen between this awesome couple, what Ellie&#8217;s Tairen looks like, her first flight in that form, and a number of other things. Ms. Wilson gave me what I wanted in spades &#8212; and then some.</p>
<p>War has been waged against the Fey by the Mages of Eld and the fighting becomes much more intense and personal in this book. The action is nearly nonstop once battling begins. We lose a few good friends, inevitable in the face of war, but sad to say that final farewell. The High Mage has huge plans, thought out over millennia, and while he succeeds on some level, Ms. Wilson masterfully spans the reader&#8217;s tension and anxiety over Rain and Ellie&#8217;s plight chapter after chapter until the last possible moment. She had me tied up in knots when it seemed capture was finally imminent and I just couldn&#8217;t stand to read any further, not wanting to know what happens to them. I literally would let book in hand fall to my lap and my head drop back to the top of the couch, insides twisting with despair. This book is filled with those types of moments. I, of course, kept reading, letting that despair then be overwhelmed by curiosity, only to plunge headlong back into that former state. Back and forth it went over and over again.</p>
<p>And all of that is nothing compared to the moment Ellie and the High Mage do come face to face. Her parents, who have been in his evil, torturous hands for centuries, are used against her. Her twin sisters, who are recently his prisoners, are used against her. Ellie&#8217;d seen all of this in her dreams and she&#8217;s able to hold out as the mage taunts her. It&#8217;s not until she discovers what has befallen Rain that her Tairen bursts free. And what happens next is astonishing. More than I could have imagined. More than I could ever put into words, so I won&#8217;t try. It&#8217;s the author who does it to perfection. Ms. Wilson&#8217;s superb job with the bonding completion and the resulting events, one of my fervent hopes that comes true, is entrancing and spellbinding. Ellie is beautiful indeed.</p>
<p>I knew there would be times during my reading that tears would threaten. What amazed me is those tears came at points I didn&#8217;t expect, nowhere close to those moments I did. The most poignant and surprising came with Annoura, Queen of Celieria, who is a character many have come to dislike somewhat in the last couple of books. I find my heart softening. my sympathizing toward her unexpected but in hindsight not surprising when in such talented author hands. There are other very emotional scenes in the book, some with those characters we&#8217;ve come to love and some with new characters who we can&#8217;t but love instantly.</p>
<p>Having been on the edge in 2007 of nearly missing this entire series is a moment of disbelief for me now that I&#8217;ve read the entire series. I know what I would have been missing, a terrific story with awesome characters in a world worth fighting to the death against evil for, and I&#8217;m now glad to have been a part of it. But not having read the words of the talented C.L. Wilson is such a shame for any reader. Trust me on that one.</p>
<p>If I could add another ten, fifty, a hundred, or even more pluses after my review grade for this book, I certainly would. It deserves that and so much more.</p>
<p><strong><img style="margin-left: 5px; width: 114px; margin-right: 5px; height: 114px;" title="SandyM" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/sandym-icon.jpg" alt="SandyM" hspace="5" width="114" height="114" align="left" />Grade: A+</strong></p>
<blockquote><p><strong> Summary:</strong></p>
<p><em>A Song of Love won her heart.<br />
A Song of Darkness haunted her soul.<br />
A Song in the Dance would seal her fate.<br />
</em></p>
<p>Seers had long foreseen an extraordinary destiny for Ellysetta                                   Baristani. Already she had won the heart of the Fey King?the                                   magnificent Rain, ever her ally, eternally her love. She had                                   saved the offspring of the magical tairen and fought beside                                   her legendary mate against the armies of Eld.</p>
<p>But the most powerful–and dangerous–Verse of her                                   Song had yet to be sung.</p>
<p>As the final battle draws nigh and evil tightens its grip upon                                   her soul–will Ellysetta secure the world for Light or                                   plunge it into Darkness for all eternity? As she and Rain fight                                   for each other, side by side, will they find a way to complete                                   their truemate bond and defeat the evil High Mage of Eld before                                   it&#8217;s too late, or must they make the ultimate sacrifice to save                                   their world?</p>
<p><strong> Read an <a title="Crown of Crystal Flame excerpt" href="http://clwilson.com/TS_Crown%20of%20Crystal%20Flame.pdf" target="_blank">excerpt</a>.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Other books in this series:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Lord of the Fading Lands" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959770.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959789/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Lady of Light and Shadows" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959789.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="King of Sword and Sky" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960590.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img title="Queen of Song and Souls" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960604.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="97" height="160" /></a></p>
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		<title>REVIEW: Queen of Song and Souls by C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2009/11/23/review-queen-of-song-and-souls-by-c-l-wilson/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2009/11/23/review-queen-of-song-and-souls-by-c-l-wilson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2009 07:00:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[October 2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queen of Song and Souls]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Sandy M&#8217;s review of Queen of Song and Souls (Tairen Soul, Book 4) by C.L. Wilson Fantasy Romance published by Leisure Books 27 Oct 09 This is one of those books you can&#8217;t wait to get your hands on. Anticipation courses through you as you open it up and finally get a taste of the [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Queen of Song and Souls" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960604.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="97" height="160" /></a>Sandy M&#8217;s review of <a title="Queen of Song and Souls" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><strong>Queen of Song and Souls (Tairen Soul, Book 4)</strong></a> by <a title="C.L. Wilson" href="http://clwilson.com/index.htm" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson</a><br />
<em>Fantasy Romance published by Leisure Books 27 Oct 09</em></p>
<p>This is one of those books you can&#8217;t wait to get your hands on. Anticipation courses through you as you open it up and finally get a taste of the wonderful writing, get reacquainted with old friends, and get caught up in the new joys and tragedies they face. But then when you reach the halfway mark in the story, it becomes one of those books that you don&#8217;t want to ever end. You want to slow down in your reading and make it last so much longer than the day you&#8217;ve already spent with it, but you simply can&#8217;t. Everything about this book hooks your emotions and puts you through the wringer over and over again, leaving you both overjoyed and saddened at the same time and also leaving you wanting more.</p>
<p>Right off the bat in this latest installment in her Tairen Soul series, C.L. Wilson not only puts her fans through the emotional wringer, but she also squeezes their heart until it either has to burst with happiness or break with heartache. And all of that is done with that richness of writing that Ms. Wilson is now known for. That alone is worth picking up the books in this series.</p>
<p>Rain and Ellie are still on their course toward their bond of truemates. Ellie has still yet to complete her bond, thus the madness that is inflicted on the mate who has bonded has begun for Rain, the knowledge of which he&#8217;s trying to keep from her as they make their way across the land to gather allies in the Mage war that has already taken too many lives. The scenes in which Rain loses control, full of bloodlust, are terrific but heart-rending scenes.</p>
<p>Ellie has inner turmoil of her own, once she realizes how and why she was born, what others have lost because of her birth, what she must do now to make sure those tragedies and losses finally mean something. She has also yet to fully discover her Tairen Soul. In this book shes comes very, very close, the Tairen just beneath the surface in certain circumstances but her ability to shift and breathe fire is still eluding her.</p>
<p>We once again live through the love, heartache, and pain of Ellie&#8217;s parents, Shan and Elfeya, who are being held captive and constantly, horribly, brutally tortured by the High Mage in hopes that brutality will aid in his catpure of Ellie and he will finally complete his diabolical plans. This villain is one sick puppy. What he&#8217;ll do, what he&#8217;ll go through for power and all that goes with it is beyond believable. What he&#8217;s already done to Shan and Elfeya is even beyond that, and you only hope Ms. Wilson will give them a happily ever after at the end of this series after all they&#8217;ve borne so far.</p>
<p>The conclusion of Adrial and Talisa&#8217;s mistimed truemating is also part of this book. I was looking forward to their story after waiting through <a title="King of Sword and Sky" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>King of Sword and Sky</em></a> where it did not fit and had to be bumped to the <em>QoSaS</em>. I was more than happy to do so because that meant one extra book in the series in the long run. But my heart will never be the same after reading their fate, even though they will be together.</p>
<p>And there is so, so much more in between all of this. This book is jam packed with action, betrayal, and, of course, love and romance. If you have not read this series, you are definitely missing out on some of the best books to come along in a very long time. Pick up <a title="Lord of the Fading Lands" href=" http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Lord of the Fading Lands</em></a>, and I guarantee you you will be entranced and hooked in no time at all.</p>
<p>We now know there will be a fifth book, <em>Tairen Soul</em>, of the series, which is wonderful news for die-hard fans. Alas, it&#8217;s the waiting that kills us first. Then it&#8217;s the knowledge that when we read too fast, the end of such a good thing is that much closer.</p>
<p><strong><img style="margin-left: 5px; width: 114px; margin-right: 5px; height: 114px;" title="SandyM" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/sandym-icon.jpg" alt="SandyM" hspace="5" width="114" height="114" align="left" />Grade: A+</strong></p>
<blockquote><p><strong> Summary:</strong></p>
<p><span>The first deadly battles of the                                   new Mage Wars have been fought, and victory has been won at                                   a terrible price. As the toll of an unfulfilled matebond and                                   the torment of war begins tips Rain towards madness, Ellysetta                                   knows if she cannot find a way to defeat the darkness growing                                   inside her and complete the truemate bond, Rain will die and                                   she will become the prophesied monster Vadim Maur uses to destroy                                   the Fey and enslave the World.</span></p>
<p><strong> Read an <a title="Queen of Song and Souls excerpt" href="http://clwilson.com/books1.htm#QueenOfSongAndSouls" target="_blank">excerpt</a>. </strong>(scroll down and click link)<strong><br />
</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Other books in this series:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Lord of the Fading Lands" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959770.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959789/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Lady of Light and Shadows" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959789.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img title="King of Sword and Sky" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960590.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a></p>
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		<title>EXCERPT: Queen of Song and Souls by C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2009/11/04/excerpt-queen-of-song-and-souls-by-c-l-wilson/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2009/11/04/excerpt-queen-of-song-and-souls-by-c-l-wilson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Nov 2009 20:00:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Excerpt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Lord of the Fading Lands]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve been a fan of C.L. Wilson&#8217;s Tairen Soul series since the very first book. I was lucky enough to get an ARC of that book, Lord of the Fading Lands, a couple of months before its release date back in 2007.  I was instantly enraptured by the story, the romance, and most of all [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Queen of Song and Souls" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960604.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="97" height="160" /></a>I&#8217;ve been a fan of <a title="C.L. Wilson" href="http://www.clwilson.com/index.htm" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson&#8217;s</a> Tairen Soul series since the very first book. I was lucky enough to get an ARC of that book, <a title="Lord of the Fading Lands" href=" http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Lord of the Fading Lands</em></a>, a couple of months before its release date back in 2007.  I was instantly enraptured by the story, the romance, and most of all by Ms. Wilson&#8217;s writing. The complexity of the world she&#8217;s built, the richness of the writing that flows from her imagination, and the emotions she evokes from her characters are all, simply put, beautiful.</p>
<blockquote><p>The first deadly battles of the new Mage Wars have been fought, and victory has been won a terrible price. As the toll of an unfulfilled matebond and the torment of war begins tips Rain towards madness, knows if she cannot find a way to defeat the darkness growing inside her and complete the truemate bond, Rain will die she will become the prophesied monster Vadim Maur uses to destroy the Fey and enslave the World.</p></blockquote>
<p>A warning: Below is the entire first chapter of <em>Queen of Song and Souls</em>, so it&#8217;s lengthy. But to get the full effect of that richness, the world, and those characters, what better way to experience it. Especially if you&#8217;ve not read Ms. Wilson&#8217;s work before. If you&#8217;re a fan of the series and have yet to pick up <em>Queen</em>, enjoy!</p>
<blockquote>
<p style="text-align: center;">
<p style="text-align: center;">Prologue</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Celieria ~ the Garreval<br />
She was only nine years old, and she was going to die.<br />
Lillis Baristani clung to her beloved friend, Earth master Kieran vel Solande, and showered his throat with frightened tears.<br />
Around them the world had gone mad. Magic, blades, and barbed sel’dor arrows filled the air. Blood ran red on the ground. Below, at the base of the Rhakis mountains, dozens of vile, snarling, monstrous wolf-beasts called darrokken were charging up the slope towards the small, fleeing party while the creatures’ evil masters flung globe after globe of blue-white Mage Fire to cut off all chance of escape.<br />
Whatever the Mage Fire touched disintegrated on contact…not dissolved …simply disappeared. Entire chunks of the mountain evaporated in an instant, and the ground was shifting and shaking beneath Kieran’s feet.<br />
“Kieran!” his friend Kiel shouted, pointing uphill. “The mountain!” Another frightful barrage of Mage Fire had dissolved half the peak above their heads. The remaining rock and stone gave a rumbling shriek and collapsed, sending a wall of dirt, stone, and wood rushing towards them.<br />
“Hold tight, little one,” Kieran whispered. Lillis tightened her arms around his neck, pressing so close that her kitten, Snowfoot, mewed a protest and squirmed in the sling tied round her neck. Kieran turned to raise both hands and she felt the electric tingle of his gathering magic. It danced across her skin like crackling sparks of green light. Inside her, Lillis’s own magic rose in response.<br />
She squeezed her eyes shut and pressed her face to his throat. Bright Lord, please help Kieran, she prayed. I don’t want to him to die. Or Papa, Lorelle, Kiel, or me either.<br />
She felt the vibrations of Kieran’s throat against her lips as he shouted defiantly and flung out his weaves. The magic left him—and her too—in a great rush. Please, gods, please gods, please, gods.<br />
Incredibly—or, perhaps, miraculously—the crumbling mountainside froze. Lillis risked a glance up to confirm that they were not about to be crushed flat as a griddle cake, then squeezed her eyes shut again.<br />
“Five-fold weaves, my brothers!” Kieran shouted. “Keep that scorching Mage Fire off us!” Suddenly, he gave a grunt of pain, and Lillis felt him falter. Her head lifted, and though the battle raging all around terrified her, she forced her eyes open.<br />
Kieran was arrow-shot. The sight of the ugly black, barbed metal arrow puncturing his thigh made her belly lurch.<br />
**Get down, Lillis,** his voice murmured in her mind. **Run to your father. Kiel and I will hold them off.**<br />
**But what about you?** It was the first time she’d ever spoken to him mind-to-mind. **You’re coming too, aren’t you?**<br />
**In a chime …once Kiel and I deal with these Eld rultsharts.** From a face too handsome to be mortal, his normally laughing blue eyes regarded her with unsettling solemnity, and then she knew what he would not say. He turned his head to press a kiss to her face, then another to the thin arms wrapped so tight around his neck, and though he did not release his hands from his weave, she felt the tug of Spirit fingers prying her grip loose. She fought to cling, but her childish muscles were no match for his magic. Her hold on him lost, she slid to the ground. **Go, kitling. Quickly.** Another nudge from invisible hands shoved her towards Papa.<br />
“Master Baristani,” Kieran cried aloud to her father, “take the girls. Go with the shei’dalins into the Mists! Run!”<br />
Clutching Snowfoot to her chest, Lillis stumbled across the uneven ground towards Papa’s outstretched arms and the small knot of scarlet-gowned healers. Before she reached them, a darting flash of darkness caught her eye and a foul odor filled the air. She turned to find a darrokken rushing towards her, its red eyes glowing like the Dark Lord’s flames, venomous saliva dripping from its yellowed fangs. All over the foul wolflike creature’s scaly back, sores oozed green, odorous slime. She turned to run, but her foot caught between two rocks and she went down. Snowfoot still clutched to her chest, she hit the ground hard. Knees and elbows took a nasty crack, and she bit her lip so hard her mouth filled with the salty, metallic tang of blood. She jumped to her feet, but pain shot out from her ankle, radiating halfway up her shin. With a cry, she fell down again just as the darrokken lunged.<br />
One of the Fey warriors made a sprinting leap towards her, and scarlet-hilted Fey’cha daggers flew from his hands. The razor-sharp blades cut through the monster’s tough, leathery hide, and the darrokken dropped dead in its tracks.<br />
“I’ve got you.” The warrior who’d killed the darrokken reached for her arm, but before he could grab hold, another of the monstrous beasts was upon him. Its fangs sank into his leg, and the Fey toppled, rolling over as he fell and landing with unsheathed blades in his hands. “Run, child,” he cried.<br />
Those were the warrior’s last words. He bared his teeth in a snarl and plunged his red Fey’cha into the vulnerable belly of the beast just as the monster snapped its sharp yellow fangs around the warrior’s throat and ripped. Blood sprayed across Lillis’s face in a hot, red rain. Fey and beast died together, fighting, tearing, and slashing until the last breath of life left their bodies.<br />
“Lillis! Get up! Run!” Kiel cried. His blue eyes were filled with fear, his blond hair spattered with dirt and blood. Two black arrows stuck out of his shoulder like grotesque spines. “Run for the Mists. Lorelle, Master Baristani—go!”<br />
One of the shei’dalins in their party rushed forward to grab Lillis. A rapid healing weave spun out in golden-tinted waves of color, and the pain in her ankle subsided. The woman helped Lillis to her feet while another took Lorelle’s hand and began to run towards the shifting, sparkling clouds that guarded the Fading Lands. More darrokken rushed up the mountainside and dove into the middle of the small group. Lillis shrieked as the monstrous wolf-beasts slaughtered half a dozen more Fey and drove three of the shei’dalins back down the mountain towards the waiting Eld.<br />
When she reached the edge of the Mists, Lillis turned back to watch the battle below. The remaining warriors guarding their escape were falling fast to the ferocious maws of the darrokken, while the Mages continued bombarding the mountainside with their devastating magic. A tide of Fey warriors burst from the Mists-filled pass of the Garreval and raced across the ground at lightning speed, swords flashing silvery bright in the sunlight.<br />
Black Eld arrows turned day to night, and hundreds of Fey went down. Kieran fell with them.<br />
“Kieran!” Lillis shrieked as she watched him fall. “Kieran!” She started to rush towards him, but the shei’dalin grabbed her and held her fast.<br />
“Nei,” the veiled woman whispered. “You cannot go to him. He would not want it. He dies so you may live.”<br />
With unexpected strength, the shei’dalin shoved Lillis towards the shifting radiance of the Faering Mists. “Quickly, into the Mists. It’s our only chance.”<br />
Lillis struggled against her hold, squirming and flailing as the tears poured down her face. She screamed Kieran’s name again and again as the shei’dalin dragged her away. Before they’d gone more than a few steps, the mountain gave a groaning rumble that escalated to a deafening roar.<br />
Kieran’s Earth weave collapsed and the entire mountaintop caved in,<br />
sending shards of shattered rocks, splintered trees, and a wave of earth crashing towards the valley below. The ground beneath Lillis’s feet fell away, and with a wail she toppled back into the shining white abyss of the Faering Mists.<br />
Her last sight was of Kieran, screaming defiance as the avalanche enveloped him.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Chapter One</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Fading Lands, Faering Mists. Fey warrior, champion of Light. Fading Lands, Faering Mists. Leading a never-ending Fight. Tairen Soul: Singing, soaring high. Tairen Soul: Thundering, roaring cry. Fading Lands, Faering Mists. Fey warrior, fiercest of Fey. Fading Lands, Faering Mists. Alone, leading the way.<br />
~ Fiercest of Fey, by Corvan Lief, Celierian Poet</p>
<p>Celieria ~ Orest<br />
Two weeks later</p>
<p>Ellysetta Baristani plunged her hands into the gaping cavity of the dying boy’s chest. Her fingers closed around his heart, pumping the still chambers with desperate force as a blaze of powerful, golden-white magic poured from her soul into his.<br />
The fading brightness of his life force tasted warm and tart on her tongue, like a sun-ripened peach plucked too soon from the tree. So young. So innocent. He couldn’t have been more than fourteen. Too young for this. Too young for war. Too young to die.<br />
Just like her sisters, Lillis and Lorelle, who’d been lost in the Faering Mists during the battle of Teleon.<br />
“Please, my lady. Save him. Please, save my Aartys. He’s all I’ve got left.” The mother of the dying child stood sobbing beside the table, her eyes swollen and red rimmed, chapped hands twisting the hem of the blood-soaked apron tied around her waist. Her desperation and grief-induced terror pounded at Ellysetta’s empathic senses like hammer blows.<br />
Not that a few more hammer blows made much difference in the emotional din swirling around the scarlet healing tents that had been erected on the mist- and rainbow-filled plazas of Upper Orest. As always when a battle raged nearby, the sheer numbers of wounded and dying warriors made it impossible for the dozen scarlet-veiled shei’dalin healers to weave peace upon them all. Not even the roar of the great Kiyera’s Veil waterfalls could drown out the screams of pain and pleas for mercy.<br />
“I’ll do my best, Jonna,” Ellysetta vowed. She wanted to promise to save Aartys, but the last weeks here on Celieria’s war-torn northern border had taught her too well. Death, once a stranger, had become an all-too-familiar acquaintance.<br />
Ellysetta looked up and met Jonna’s eyes over the boy’s limp body. The weeping mortal woman was one of the hearth witches who tended the wounded and dying. She knew death as intimately as Ellysetta now did, but that didn’t stop her from fighting against it with every ounce of strength she possessed—or from begging for a salvation she knew was beyond the capabilities of all mortal healers …and all but one of the Fey shei’dalins.<br />
Ellysetta bit her lip. Aartys shouldn’t be here on her table—and she couldn’t help feeling partly to blame. After all, if not for her, the Fey might never have engaged their ancient enemy in this new Mage War. If not for Ellysetta, her truemate, Rainier vel’En Daris, would never have blown his golden horn this morning to call his Fey warriors and the mortal men of Orest to battle. And if he’d never blown that blast, the sound would never have spurred Jonna’s young son to snatch up his dead father’s sword and rush to fight alongside the men of Orest and his heroes, the immortal Shining Folk of the Fading Lands.<br />
Yet those things had happened. And now, here they were, a child maimed and dying, his mother weeping and pleading for his life, both utterly dependent on Ellysetta and her magic to snatch his life from the jaws of death.<br />
“Hold his hand, Jonna,” Ellysetta commanded. “Feed him your strength. Call to him. Don’t stop until I tell you.” And then, though she shouldn’t have vowed it, she did: “If there’s any way to save Aartys, I will.”<br />
“Oh, my lady.” Jonna’s lips trembled and tears flooded her eyes. “Oh, thank you, my lady. Thank you.”<br />
She started to come around the table, but Ellysetta stopped her. “Hold his hand, Jonna.” The command came out more curtly than usual. She didn’t want this woman kneeling at her feet, kissing her hem as other Celierians had done when pleading for her to save a loved one. She wasn’t a goddess to be worshiped.<br />
“Teska, Jonna. Please,” she urged more gently. “Hold your son’s hand. There isn’t much time.” And because there truly wasn’t, she infused the words with a spider-silk-thin filament of compulsion, woven from shining lavender Spirit magic.<br />
Jonna instantly snatched up her son’s hand.<br />
“And pray, my friend,” Ellysetta said, adding silently, For all our sakes.<br />
The words to the Bright Lord’s devotion tumbled from the mortal healer’s lips.<br />
Ellysetta flicked a glance at the tall, grim Fey warrior standing near the corner of her healing table.<br />
Without a word, Gaelen vel Serranis stepped forward to lay a hand upon her shoulder. Crackling energy flooded her veins as the most infamous of the five bloodsworn warriors of her quintet surrendered his immense power for her use. The sort of healing she was about to do would take more than her own vast stores of power, and though usually a shei’dalin would rely on her truemate to supplement her strength, Rain was on the battlefield, where the king of the Fey belonged, rather than at her side.<br />
Ellysetta closed her eyes, shut out the world, and gathered her magic. Power came to her call, a dazzling golden-white brightness the Fey called shei’dalin’s love, a healing gift Ellysetta Baristani wielded with a strength the world had not seen since the dawn of the First Age.<br />
Against her closed lids, the pulsating vibrancy of Fey vision replaced physical sight, darkness teeming with the glowing threads of energy that made up all life and substance. Her consciousness traveled down the blinding-bright conduits of her arms, into Aartys’s dying body, then sank deeper. Moving with swift purpose, she followed the threads of her healing weave and descended into the Well of Souls, the blackness that lay beyond and beneath the physical world, the home of demons and the unborn and the dead waiting for passage into their next life.<br />
There, she could see the fading light of Aartys’s soul as he sank into the long, silent dark of the Well. When his light disappeared, he would be lost. Determined not to let that happen, she plunged after him, her presence a dazzling incandescence that lit the shadowy world of the Well like a golden-white sun.<br />
**Aartys.** She wove Spirit, the mystic magic of thought and illusion, hoping to make him feel his mother’s grief and fill him with an urgent need to return to her. **Fight, Aartys. Fight to live.** Death, ultimately, was like drowning. Once the initial terror passed, the dying embraced the numbness and simply let themselves fall, like wrecked ships sinking to the bottom of the sea. **Do not surrender. Reach for my Light. Let me bring you back to your mother. She needs you. She will be lost without you.**<br />
Her weave was strong, her command of Spirit as exceptional as her command of the potent healing magic of the Fey. Yet still he fell.<br />
So tired, his fading spirit whispered. Tell Mam I …His voice trailed off and the pale light of his soul began to sputter.<br />
**Aartys!** Ellysetta dove after him. The threads of her weave stretched to the breaking point as she followed him deep into the Well, deeper than any other healer dared to go, deeper than she should have gone without Rain to anchor her.<br />
**Take my magic, kem’falla,** Gaelen said. **Use what you need, and quickly. You have been gone from yourself too long.**<br />
**Aiyah.** She seized the magic Gaelen had offered for her use—the dark black threads of magic that throbbed with red sparks. Azrahn, the forbidden soul magic.<br />
Ellysetta worked quickly, reluctant to put Gaelen at risk by making him hold his weave for more than a chime or two. Though Gaelen considered the chance to save Fey lives well worth the risk of wielding Azrahn, they both knew how dangerous the magic was. She plaited the cool, dark threads of his Azrahn into her flows of shei’dalin’s love, weaving the strands of icy shadow and warm, healing light together.<br />
The new weave—amplified by her powers as well as Gaelen’s own—let her descend much farther into the Well. But as deep as she went, Aartys remained out of reach.<br />
**Enough, kem’falla,** Gaelen said. **We’re out of time.**<br />
**Just a little farther.**<br />
**Nei. You’ve been gone from yourself too long. If you cannot save the boy now, you must let him go. Your life is too important to risk so needlessly.**<br />
Anger bubbled up inside her. **Needlessly?**<br />
**You know what I mean.**<br />
**Every life is precious, Gaelen.** She’d held too many dying men in her arms, comforted too many stricken loved ones, seen her own mother beheaded by the Eld. She could not bear the thought of one more lost, wasted life—especially not this beautiful boy, whose bright eyes and sunny smile had reminded her of her own young sisters.<br />
Nei, she could not—would not—lose another soul today. Not to magic, not to war, and not to the thrice-flamed Well of Souls!<br />
Cold whispered through her veins. Azrahn surged up from the great, deep source inside her, summoned by her anger. An almost sentient eagerness pressed against her will, as if the Azrahn inside her wanted her to weave it<br />
wanted her to embrace its dark, forbidden power.<br />
For her, giving in to that temptation would come with a terrible price. She bore four Mage Marks, placed upon her by the High Mage of Eld, and each time she spun Azrahn, she risked receiving another one. Two more and her soul, her consciousness, her entire being, would be his to command.<br />
Still, the lure was tremendous. Gaelen’s threads didn’t contain a fraction of the power her own did. She could weave just a little …just enough to save the boy. Perhaps she could even spin it quickly enough that the High Mage wouldn’t have time to sense it and Mark her again.<br />
Yes …yes, just a little, and quickly. Such a small thing. Surely he would miss it.<br />
The siren’s call whispered in her ear. Dimly, she heard someone say her name, as if calling from far away, but the voice was soon was silenced. Forbidden power throbbed in her veins, and all around her, the darkness of the Well of Souls pulsed to the same beat. Her ears filled with muted susurrations, a rhythmic ebbing and flowing, as if she were a child in the womb, listening to the blood rushing through her mother’s veins. The sound was hypnotic …entrancing….<br />
She reached for her Azrahn, let its cold sweetness fill her.<br />
**Ellysetta!** A furious and all-too-familiar voice roared her name. Power rushed into her body, and deep within the Well, her Light flared like an exploding sun.<br />
The jolt sent her weave spearing wildly into the Well, so deep it passed the fading light that was Aartys’s soul. Stunned, she had just enough time and presence of mind to close her weave around Aartys and cling tight before her soul was yanked from the Well and slammed back into her own body.<br />
The shining brilliance of Fey vision faded to darkness. The tranquillity of the Well gave way to a murmur of voices, muted screams of men in pain, the smells of blood and sweat and suffering. Her eyes fluttered as her senses gradually returned to her body.<br />
She was clutched in a hot, hard, golden embrace, but neither that nor the blazing heat of two burning purple suns glaring down upon her could stop the icy shivers racking her frame. She blinked up into the achingly beautiful, utterly furious face of her truemate.<br />
“Rain, I—”<br />
His eyes flared tairen-bright. Pupils and whites disappeared, leaving only spark-filled whirls of lavender that glowed so bright they could have lit a dark room. “Do. Not. Speak.” His nostrils flared, and even the long, inky black strands of his hair crackled with scarcely contained energy. “Just …be silent.” He was so angry, his temper bordered on Rage, the wild, ferociously lethal fury of the Fey.<br />
A choked sound snagged her attention. “Aartys!” she cried.<br />
Powerful arms encased in heavy, golden, tairen-forged steel tightened their grip around her and held her fast. “Is alive and does not need your help.”<br />
She turned her head, but she couldn’t see the boy. Scarlet-veiled shei’dalins surrounded the table where he lay, and the glow of concentrated healing magic shone so bright even mortal eyes could see it.<br />
“Beylah sallan,” she breathed. Thank the gods.<br />
That remark was the feather that broke the tairen’s back. Rain plunked her on her feet, gripped her arms, and gave her a shake strong enough to rattle her teeth. “Thank the gods? Thank the gods?” His Rage blazed so hot, flames nearly shot from his head. “Thank Gaelen for having the belated sense to call me when he realized what was happening.” He shook her again. “Idiot! Ninnywit! Reckless, rock-headed dim-skull! How many times are you going to put yourself in such danger?”<br />
Her brows snapped together. “Me?” she shot back. “That’s a bit of the sword calling the dagger sharp, don’t you think?” She yanked herself out of his grasp and returned his glare with her own. “Do I berate you for all the risks you take in battle?”<br />
He drew himself up to his full height, and with his golden war steel adding significant breadth to his already broad shoulders, he loomed over her. “Don’t try to turn this on me. I am the Defender of the Fey, and we are at war. It is my duty to lead our warriors in battle.”<br />
“And I am a shei’dalin,” she retorted. “The most powerful healer we have. It is my duty to save every life I can!”<br />
“Not at the risk of your own! You were about to weave Azrahn, Ellysetta! Despite the danger—despite your sworn oath never to weave it again unless we both agreed.”<br />
The pain in his voice—even more than the frightening truth of his words—deflated her defensive ire. She had made a vow and nearly betrayed it—nearly betrayed him. Her shoulders slumped and she lifted a shaking hand to her face.<br />
He was right, but before she could admit it and apologize, Jonna gave a short cry. Rain and Ellysetta both turned to the table where Aartys lay. The shei’dalins had extinguished their weaves and were already departing. The boy was sitting up, the gaping wound in his chest gone without a trace, even the dried blood and grime of war washed away by shei’dalin magic. His mother had her arms wrapped tight around him, and her shoulders heaved with sobs of relief and joy.<br />
“Thank you.” Jonna wept, tears raining from her eyes. “Thank you for my son. Light’s blessings upon you!”<br />
Ellysetta found Rain’s hand. He’d removed his gauntlets, and her fingers curled into the broad, warm strength of his.<br />
His eyes flashed a warning at her, but to Jonna he offered only gentle understanding. “Sha vel’mei, Jonna,” he said, his voice a deep, rough velvet purr. “You are both welcome. And you, Aartys . . .” He leveled a stern look on the boy. “I do not want to see you on the battlefield again. Your sword is sharp and your soul is brave, but I need you most here, guarding your mother and the Feyreisa.” He clapped a hand on the child’s shoulder. “There is no more honorable duty for a warrior of the Fey than to protect our women. Do you accept this great honor?”<br />
“You want me to help guard the Feyreisa?” The boy’s eyes went big as coins. He cast a dazed glance at Ellysetta before turning back to Rain. “Aye, my lord Feyreisen,” he agreed. “I do accept.”<br />
“Kabei.” Good. “Then it is decided. Sers vel Jelani and vel Tibboreh”—he tilted his head towards two of the grim-eyed Fey posted at the corners of Ellysetta’s healing tent—“will explain your duties to you. For now, go with your mother and get some rest and a change of clothes.”<br />
“But the Feyreisa—” Aartys began.<br />
“—will not need your protection at the moment, as she will be coming with me.”<br />
* * *<br />
Eld ~ Boura Fell</p>
<p>Vadim Maur, the High Mage of Eld, shook off the flicker of awareness that had brushed across his senses and withdrew the part of his consciousness he’d sent into the Well. If the brief touch had been the girl, she was gone now, and the protections that barred him from her mind were firmly back in place. He could still sense her existence, but that was all.<br />
“Master?” The timid, subservient voice near his left shoulder broke the silence. “What should I do with him?”<br />
Vadim tightened his lips in irritation, then just as quickly relaxed the pressure when he felt the flesh split and warm liquid ooze down his shrouded chin. Wordless, he dabbed the edge of his deep purple hood against his mouth. His body had grown fragile these past weeks. The Rot had him firmly in its grip, and not even the ministrations of his powerful shei’dalin captives could hold it back any longer. Soon, the truth already suspected by most of his council would be impossible to hide.<br />
His time was running out.<br />
He gazed through the observation portal into the sel’dor cage with its wild-eyed inhabitant: a young man, the last of the four magically gifted infants to whom he’d tied the souls of unborn tairen seventeen years ago. The boy had shown full mastery in four of the five Fey magics, but only a middling level three in Spirit, so there’d never been any possibility of his becoming a Tairen Soul capable of summoning the Change. But his bloodlines were strong, and he’d proven quite adept at wielding Azrahn even in early childhood.<br />
Vadim had been using him as a breeder, but recently, with the Rot advancing through Vadim’s flesh and Ellysetta Baristani still so stubbornly elusive, he had seriously considered using the boy as the vessel to house the next incarnation of his soul. At least as a stopgap until the much more powerful Ellysetta finally found her way back into his keeping.<br />
That plan was scuttled now. The boy had gone mad, just like the thousands of others to whom Vadim had grafted tairens’ souls over the centuries. The madness usually began after adolescence, starting with voices only the afflicted could hear, then progressing to bouts of Rage, and finally complete savagery and destructive madness and death.<br />
Of all the children to whom he’d bound the soul of a tairen, only Ellysetta had survived twenty-four years without a hint of insanity. That made her an invaluable prize, not only as a powerful vessel to hold Vadim’s incarnated soul, but as the key to his long centuries of experimentation. .<br />
In the cell, the boy put his hands to his head. Shrieking unintelligible gibberish, he pulled great tufts of hair out by the roots and spun around the room, slamming his body against the wall and ripping at his own flesh.<br />
Vadim’s fingers curled in a fist. “Restrain him before he damages himself more. Continue to breed him as long as you can.” Too many centuries had gone into the crossbreeding of magical bloodlines to throw the boy away without squeezing as much benefit from his existence as possible. “If he endangers the females, send him to Fezai Madia.” The leader of the Feraz witches had been complaining lately over the quality of the slaves he’d been sending for her sacrifices to the demon-god Gamorraz. Insane this boy might be, but there was no denying the strong magic in his blood.<br />
Leaving the observation room, he passed through the nursery and paused to glance into the two cradles resting against the wall. Two infants with bright, shining eyes stared up at him. Both boys, both already showing promise of mastering all Fey magics. Each had the soul of an unborn tairen grafted to his own. Would they go mad, too? Or had Vadim finally discovered the secret to successfully breeding Tairen Souls of his own?<br />
Only time would tell. For now, they represented another generation of possibility, another opportunity to succeed in case Ellysetta Baristani continued to elude him …<br />
…or in case she fell prey to the same lethal insanity as her predecessors.</p>
<p>* * *<br />
Celieria ~ Orest</p>
<p>“Where are we going?” Ellysetta asked as Rain dragged her away from the healing tents. Her quintet had started to follow, but one hot look from Rain had stopped them in their tracks.<br />
“Someplace I can keep you out of trouble.”<br />
There was still a snap in his voice, so she offered a small peace offering. “You were good with Aartys.”<br />
He gave her a withering look, and her olive branch went quietly up in flames. “Do not attempt to soothe this tairen, shei’tani. You nearly died—or worse—and I will not overlook that.”<br />
She bit her lip. He was right. She’d gone too far into the Well, and something had been quite successfully pushing her to use her most dangerous magic. Still …this double standard her truemate imposed on her had gone on long enough.<br />
“Why do you get to be angry, and I do not?”<br />
He glared. “What do you have to be angry about?”<br />
She stopped stock-still and yanked her hand from his grip. “Are you serious? I’m your shei’tani—your truemate—and you can actually ask me that?” She didn’t wait for him to reply. “How many times have you barely made it back to Orest alive? How many times have you crashed into Veil Lake, bloody and half-dead, limbs broken, flesh shredded, enough sel’dor arrows in you to supply an entire company of archers? Yet you expect me to patch you up and send you back to battle time and time again. You and every other warrior who ends up on my table.”<br />
“You are a shei’dalin. That is what shei’dalins do.”<br />
“Precisely! You fight out there.” She jabbed a finger towards the scorched and still-smoking southwest corner of Eld. “Well, that is my battlefield.” She turned and jabbed her finger back at the healing tents. “And I’m every bit as determined to win my war as you. If that means I occasionally have to take risks—just like you do—then, by the gods, that’s exactly what I’ll do!”<br />
“Over. My. Rotting. Corpse.” His teeth snapped together with an audible click. He grabbed her wrist again and put on a burst of speed that forced her to jog to keep up with him.<br />
The collection of bloodsworn black Fey’cha daggers strapped across her chest and around her hips slapped against her steel-embroidered scarlet robes as she ran, and the feeling of being a chastised child dragged along beind an irate parent only chafed her more.<br />
“You’re being unfair!” she exclaimed. “I may not have my wings yet, but I’m a Tairen Soul, too, Rain. I feel the same need to defend our people as you do. Just because the only enemy I can defend them against at the moment is death, that doesn’t mean my efforts are any less vital than yours!”<br />
His eyes glowed so bright they nearly shot purple sparks. “Have I ever suggested they were? Have I not let Gaelen weave the forbidden magic for your use so you could save lives that would otherwise be lost? I do not object to your saving lives. But I will not allow you to risk your own in the process!”<br />
“But—”<br />
“Enough!” he thundered. “You don’t have to like it, Ellysetta, but I am the Feyreisen—both your truemate and your king—and on this matter, I will be obeyed!”<br />
Ahead lay the open plaza near Veil Lake that Rain and the tairen used for launching and landing. Four majestic winged cats, each the size of a house, crouched on the manicured grass at the lakeshore. Their heads were extended as they lapped at the cold waters fed from Kiyera’s Veil, the gauntlet of three-hundred-foot waterfalls that tumbled down from opposing mountainsides at the lake’s western shore.<br />
When they reached the plaza, Rain slowed his pace. Ellysetta yanked her wrist from his grip a second time, marched to the mossy edge of the bricked space, and presented him her back. She pressed her lips in a thin line, angry at his high-handedness. For a woman who’d spent the first twenty-four years of her life as the shy, obedient daughter of a poor woodcarver and his wife, Ellysetta had become mulishly resistant to Voices of Authority. Even when those voices belonged to kings, wedded husbands, and beloved truemates. If Mama were still alive, she would shake her head in despair of her adopted daughter’s willful ways.<br />
By the lakeshore, the largest of the tairen, a great white beauty with eyes like glowing blue jewels, lifted her snowy, feline head and turned to pad towards them. Her long tail slapped against several tree trunks as she walked, bringing a shower of leaves raining down in her wake. When she reached the plaza, she spread her wide, clawed wings and reared up on her hind legs to shake the debris from her fur. A deep, throaty purr rumbled in her chest, and she tilted her head down to pin Ellysetta with a whirling, pupillesss blue gaze.<br />
**You worried your mate, kitling,** admonished Steli, chakai of the Fey’Bahren pride. The musical tones of the tairen’s speech danced in the air like flashes of silver and gold and carried with them feelings of panicked fear and images of Rain whirling in the sky and rocketing towards Upper Orest. **You should not alarm him so. Tairen frightened for their mates are dangerous—especially to beings as breakable as mortals.**<br />
“Not you, too, Steli!” Ellysetta crossed her arms, feeling immensely put out. “You think I’m not afraid when he’s out there getting maimed by arrows and bowcannon?”<br />
Steli’s ears flicked and her tail lashed the earth. **Ellysetta-kitling would not scorch the world. Rainier-Eras already has. Without you to anchor him, he would again.**<br />
That simple, inescapable truth deflated Ellysetta’s temper as nothing else could. A thousand years ago, after the death of his first mate, Sariel, Rain Tairen Soul had scorched the world in the blaze of tairen flame, killing thousands in mere instants, millions in a handful of days. He’d paid for that act of Rage with seven hundred years of madness and another three centuries spent battling his way back from the abyss.<br />
**Rainier-Eras is proud,** Steli continued, **and he does not wish to frighten his mate. He does not tell Ellysetta-kitling that each day becomes harder. That each battle weakens what took him so long to rebuild.**<br />
Ellysetta cast a troubled gaze over her shoulder. Rain stood a short distance away, shoulders hunched, pinching the bridge of his nose as he expended visible effort to calm himself. She’d frightened him badly, and his control hung in tatters. Untruemated Fey warriors absorbed the torment of every life they took—the pain, the darkness, the sorrow of lost dreams hanging like burning stones around their necks—and Rain bore the weight of millions on his soul. Mental and emotional discipline was the only thing standing between him and insanity, and her nearly fatal trip into the Well had stripped those protections threadbare. Shame washed over her.<br />
The tairen bent her head and nudged Ellysetta. **Go to your mate, kitling. He needs you. Now more than ever.**<br />
Ellysetta crossed the short distance to Rain’s side. Moss grew green and thick along the edges of the plaza’s mist-dampened bricks. Winter would be upon them soon, and the spray off the Veil would turn to flurries of ice crystals. The nights would grow longer, the Eld Mages more powerful. Despite the brave efforts of Lord Teleos’s soldiers, Celieria stood no chance of surviving the winter as a free land without the help of the Fey. The might of the tairen was the only power Mages truly feared.<br />
Until Ellysetta found her wings, Rain was the only living Tairen Soul capable of Changing to his tairen form and leading the pride into battle. As such, he would have to fight—again and again and again—and the torment of his soul would grow more unbearable with each engagement. Ellysetta hadn’t been thinking about that when she’d made her decision to save Aartys. She hadn’t been thinking about Rain at all.<br />
“I’m sorry, shei’tan,” she apologized sincerely. “I should have been more careful—for your sake if not my own.”<br />
“That’s what you always say,” he replied in a low voice, “but it never stops you from doing what you know you should not.”<br />
She rubbed her forehead, where a headache had begun to throb. “I never meant to go so deep into the Well, but he was a child, Rain. Not much older than Lillis and Lorelle. I couldn’t let him die. Can’t you understand that?”<br />
He sighed. “I do understand, shei’tani. Better than you think.” He turned to face her. “But saving that boy or even a thousand more like him won’t bring Lillis and Lorelle back.” He crossed to her side and took her shoulders in a firm grip. “You’ve got to stop risking yourself this way, Ellysetta. You’re no good to your sisters, or your father, or anyone else for that matter, if you’re dead or lose your soul to the Mages.”<br />
“I know that. I do. It’s just that—” Her voice broke off. She could feel his fear, his love, his guilt for bringing her into the dangers of a Tairen Soul’s life, his terror that he might not be strong enough to hold himself in check the next time she came so close to death.<br />
“Oh, Rain.” She leaned against him, resting her forehead against the unforgiving golden steel of his tairen-forged war armor and laying the palm of one hand against the smooth warmth of his jaw. Though they could not read each other’s thoughts until their bond was complete, they could, when they touched skin-to-skin, feel each other’s emotions as clear as day.<br />
Because he was the strongest of the Fey, the most powerful Tairen Soul in living memory, it was so easy to forget how fragile he truly was, how narrow the band that kept him from plunging into madness.<br />
**Sieks’ta, shei’tan.** I’m sorry, beloved. She wove the apology into his mind on a thread of Spirit, not reading his thoughts, but offering him one of hers. With her hand against his face, her skin touching his, she knew he could sense her sincerity and the great love she bore him just as she sensed his agitation drain away, replaced by regret and weariness.<br />
He turned his lips into her palm and pressed a kiss there. “As am I,” he said. “I know my fear for you is a burden, and it shames me that you must bear it. You are a Tairen Soul, which means you are fierce, born to fight and to defend those in your care; but you are also my shei’tani. I thought I would be strong enough to let you embrace the warrior’s side of your nature. I know now I’m not. I cannot allow you to be harmed—not even by your own actions.”<br />
Ellysetta forced a small smile. “Perhaps when our bond is complete, things will be different.”<br />
“Perhaps,” he agreed without conviction.<br />
Steli’s wings flapped. The white tairen nudged them with her nose. **Time to fly, Rainier-Eras. The day grows late.**<br />
“Aiyah.”<br />
“Where are we going?” Ellysetta asked.<br />
“Crystal Lake,” he admitted.<br />
“The Source in the mountains? But that’s bells away—” She broke off and her brows drew together in concern. Every great city in the Fading Lands had a Source at its center, and the Fey drank the water of those Sources to bolster their strength and replenish flagging magical energies. The only Source that existed outside the Fading Lands was Crystal Lake, and its magic-infused waters fed one of the tributaries that flowed into Kiyera’s Veil and the Heras River.<br />
If the diluted Source waters of the Veil were no longer powerful enough to replenish Rain’s magic or rejuvenate his strength . . .<br />
“It’s more precaution than need,” Rain reassured her, reading her expression. Fey didn’t lie, which meant he was telling the truth—or at least a version of it. “Besides, how long has it been since we’ve managed to do more than snatch a few bells’ sleep together? I thought you might like some time away from the battlefield and the healing tents.”<br />
“I would.” The other shei’dalins slipped back through the Mists every few days to restore themselves in the peace of the Fading Lands. Banished and Mage Marked as she was, Ellysetta didn’t have that luxury. “I suppose we could both use a visit to the Source,” she said, stepping back to give Rain room for the Change.<br />
He waited for her to get clear before closing his eyes and summoning his magic. Flows of power gathered and swirled around him, darkening to a gray mist that sparkled with rainbow lights. The crackling energy of his magic poured over Ellysetta in hot, electric waves. She gasped and closed her eyes on a shudder of shared pleasure as Rain’s Fey body was unmade—his flesh and consciousness flung out into the mist of the Change—then re-formed in a staggering rush into the great, sleek body of his tairen self.<br />
When the magic of the Change cleared, Rain Tairen Soul crouched where Rain the Fey had stood: a magnificent, kingly creature, like one of the sleek black jungle cats Ellysetta had seen in illustrated books of faraway lands, except that a tairen stood easily half as high as a fully grown fireoak, and great, batlike wings sprouted from his back. Even by tairen standards, Rain was an impressive male, with fur a glossy, unrelieved midnight black, a vast wingspan, and radiant, pupillesss eyes that glowed like lavender suns.<br />
He lowered his head to pin Ellysetta with that bright, whirling gaze and rumbled a throaty purr. Her body clenched like a fist, every nerve abruptly sizzling with a rush of pure, primitive heat. She might not yet have found her wings, but the tairen in her soul recognized its mate—and yearned for him with staggering force.<br />
She wet her lips and tried to compose herself while Rain purred deep in his throat and nosed her with unmistakable interest. “Stop that.” She laughed, giving him a shove. She summoned an Earth weave that transformed her gown into steel-studded scarlet leathers, with Fey’cha belts crossed over her chest and her quintet’s daggers sheathed in the belt slung around her hips. A subsequent weave summoned a burst of powerful silvery Air magic that lifted her body up and deposited her into the cradle of the leather saddle that Rain wove for her on his back. She anchored herself in place with the saddle’s leather straps. “I’m ready.”<br />
**Then spin the weave, shei’tani. Around Steli as well as us.**<br />
Ellysetta nodded and reached once more into the well of power that lay within her. Lavender Spirit, the mystic magic of consciousness, thought, and illusion, surged up in a rush and she wove the dense threads of energy in a pattern Gaelen vel Serranis had taught the Fey only a few months ago. She flung the weave out like a net, first around Steli—who promptly winked out of sight—then around herself and Rain, rendering them invisible to both mortal and magic eyes.<br />
The other tairen had left the waters of Veil Lake and padded over to the plaza. They leapt into the air seconds before Rain crouched down on his haunches and sprang skyward, and their presence provided cover for the rush of wind that might have betrayed Rain and Steli’s otherwise invisible launch.<br />
Ringed by the pride and sheathed by invisibility, Rain, Ellysetta, and Steli soared high over the Rhakis mountaintops into the thin, crisp chill of the autumn sky. A dusting of snow capped the high, jagged peaks to the north. Below, just across the Heras River, the southwest corner of Eld still smoldered from the fiery aftermath of the recent battle. What had two weeks ago been a fortified village was now a scorched plain, razed to the ground, every living and dead thing in a twenty-mile radius reduced to ash. Yet still, the Eld came to battle the legions of Orest with relentless determination, wearing them down bit by bit, retreating back into the dense forests of Eld, where, thanks to the batteries of bowcannon trained on the skies, not even the tairen could follow.<br />
To the west, the billowing wall of mist that marked the borders of the Fading Lands rose up from the mountaintops. Rain flew close enough that Ellysetta could feel the tingle of magic from the Mists, and her fingers tightened on the pommel.<br />
From the valley floor, the Mists looked like a line of thunderclouds hugging the crests of the Rhakis mountains. From the sky, however, they looked more beautiful than foreboding, like a radiant veil of shifting rainbows that stretched upward as far as the eye could see.<br />
Ominous thunderheads or shimmering veil, Ellysetta recognized the Faering Mists for what they truly were: a deadly magical barrier meant to keep the enemies of the Fey from entering the Fading Lands.<br />
It was true that many an innocent shepherd had wandered by accident into the Mists, only to emerge again, decades later, unharmed, not aged a day, carrying tales of being feted by the Fair Folk in misty forest palaces. To the not-so-innocent, the Mists were far less kind. Entire armies had been swallowed up, never to be seen again.<br />
Ellysetta’s body tensed with remembered pain. She knew, firsthand, the torments that lay within those shifting clouds. Thanks to the four Mage Marks she bore, the Mists were now more dangerous to her than the Well of Souls, and the last time she’d entered, she’d very nearly not made it back out again alive.<br />
If it were otherwise, she would not be here in Orest, weaving her magic to save lives. She would be in the Mists, searching every gods-cursed fingerspan of the magical barrier, tearing it apart thread by scorching thread if she had to.<br />
Because somewhere in that veil of shifting mist, the last members of her family had been trapped; and she could not reach them …or even tell if they were still alive.<br />
* * *<br />
The Faering Mists</p>
<p>“Lorelle! Papa! Can you hear me? Where are you?” Lillis Baristani&#8217;s voice was hoarse from shouting, and the ocean of tears she&#8217;d shed had left her eyes swollen and burning.<br />
She turned in circles and squinted in a vain effort to pierce the suffocating veil of shifting whiteness around her. She’d been in the Mists a long time—bells, certainly, maybe even a day or more, though it was hard to tell time when the vapor was eternally lit by its own magical glow. In any event, she’d not seen or heard another living being since the moment the mountain had shuddered like a wild, angry beast and she’d lost her footing and fallen back into the Faering Mists.<br />
Never in all her life had she been so alone. Always, someone had been with her: her twin, Lorelle, or Mama or Papa or Ellie.<br />
Alone was frightening. Almost more frightening than the terrible, monstrous darrokken or the evil Eld soldiers that had attacked Teleon. Almost more frightening than even the sight of Kieran screaming as he disappeared beneath an avalanche of dirt, rock, and toppling trees.<br />
&#8220;Kieran?&#8221; she cried. &#8220;Kiel? Anybody?&#8221;<br />
There was still no answer.<br />
Lillis blinked back tears and clutched her small kitten to her chest. “They’re not coming, Snowfoot. I don’t think anyone’s coming.” In the sling tied around her neck, her black-and-white kitten mewed and squirmed and sank its tiny sharp claws into the wool jacket covering Lillis&#8217;s pinafore.<br />
Papa had always told Lillis, “If ever you get lost, kitling, stay right where you are. Your mama and I will come to find you.” But Mama was dead—killed by the same evil people who had attacked Teleon—and Lillis had waited long enough in the white blindness of the Mists to know that either no one was still alive to find her or they were looking in the wrong place.<br />
Either way, she couldn’t stay here.<br />
She stroked Snowfoot&#8217;s soft fur and hummed a little song Ellie had always sung to Lillis and Lorelle when they were frightened or upset. The tune didn&#8217;t soothe Lillis like it did when Ellie sang it, but Snowfoot stopped his anxious mewing.<br />
“I&#8217;ll bet you&#8217;re getting hungry and thirsty, aren&#8217;t you?” Lillis murmured to the kitten. “I know I am.” She wrapped her thin arms around the tiny feline, cuddling it closer and pressing her face to the soft fur at the top of its head. &#8220;Come on, Snowfoot,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Let&#8217;s go find Papa and Lorelle.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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		<title>DUCK CHAT: Dreams Do Come True with C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2009/11/04/wip-duck-chat-fantasizing-with-c-l-wilson/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2009/11/04/wip-duck-chat-fantasizing-with-c-l-wilson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Nov 2009 15:00:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Guests and Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Duck Chat]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[King of Sword and Sky Dorchester]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lord of the Fading Lands]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queen of Song and Souls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Once again, welcome back to Duck Chat! Today C.L. Wilson is with us, and if you&#8217;re looking for a fresh, new, intriguing,and oh-so-romantic series, has she got one for you! Born and raised in Texas, Cheryl&#8217;s imagination came alive at a young age when she fell in love with fantasy stories and began writing her [...]]]></description>
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<p><img class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-6305" title="Duck Chat" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/duckchaticon2.thumbnail.jpg" alt="Duck Chat" width="128" height="91" />Once again, welcome back to Duck Chat!</p>
<p>Today <a title="C.L. Wilson" href="http://clwilson.com/index.htm" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson</a> is with us, and if you&#8217;re looking for a fresh, new, intriguing,and oh-so-romantic series, has she got one for you!</p>
<p>Born and raised in Texas, Cheryl&#8217;s imagination came alive at a young age when she fell in love with fantasy stories and began writing her own. She continued writing, never giving up, until she finished a 1,000-page manuscript that she promptly sent out to publishers. And they promptly sent it back to her. But it was Dorchester Publishing that finally took a chance on such a lengthy manuscript along with a new author, and the rest, as they say, is history. Cheryl&#8217;s Tairen Soul series hit the shelves, fans became enamored, and now with four books in the series down and one to go, a 25-year success story is born.</p>
<p>Cheryl now lives in Florida with her husband and their two sons and a menagerie of animals, both domestic and wild. She&#8217;s continuing to work on her Tairen Soul series, but has another book in the works, after which she&#8217;ll return to the Tairen series to give fans stories about some of their favorite secondary characters. Be sure to leave a comment or a question for Cheryl today. She&#8217;s giving away a copy of <em>Queen of Song and Souls</em>.</p>
<p>Now let&#8217;s chat!</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-8069" title="C.L. Wilson" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/clwilson-150x150.jpg" alt="C.L. Wilson" width="150" height="150" /><strong>DUCK CHAT: Cheryl, first congratulations on such a success story you’ve had over the last couple of years with your Tairen Soul series. Having your first book/series published, meeting and friending some of your favorite authors, fans clamoring for more of your books – what in the world has this ride been like for you, especially after 25 years of dedicated writing before the big break came along?</strong></p>
<p>C.L. WILSON: Thanks so much!  And thanks so much, Ladies of GB&amp;U, for having me here today.  As for the ride, it’s literally been the roller coaster of a lifetime.  I’ve had enormous highs, last year with all the problems getting <a title="Queen of Song and Souls" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Queen of Song and Souls</em></a> complete was a real low, but the ride keeps rushing on, and scary though it occasionally may seem, I don’t want it to end any time soon.  </p>
<p>I love writing.  I love receiving letters from readers who have enjoyed my books.  I love meeting people and encouraging other writers to pursue their dreams.  I love my children being proud of their mom, and my husband posting my book covers in his office at work.</p>
<p><strong>DC: If you could retire any question and never, ever have it asked again, what would it be? Feel free to answer it.</strong></p>
<p>CW: LOL…I’m not going to complain about any question.  I’m still just so thrilled someone wants to know.    There are questions I get asked so frequently that I’ve created standard answers and stored them in outlook so I don’t have to type the same thing again and again, but that’s just to save time, not because I mind the question.</p>
<p><strong>DC: I&#8217;ve heard writers often say their stories take them in surprising directions, or dialogue flows from some unknown place. Is it the same with you? Do your characters surprise you sometimes?</strong></p>
<p>CW: Absolutely – that’s the magic of writing, and that’s what keeps me writing. If I know everything – if I can’t surprise myself – I get bored long before I reach the end of the book.  That’s why plotting everything out BEFORE I write the book doesn’t work for me.  I have to plot out basic character and story arcs, I have to have some idea of the four major turning points in the book, and then I have to jump in and go on the journey of discovery with my characters.  So many surprising things happen to us all along the way, and I wouldn’t change that for anything.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-8070" title="Lady of Light and Shadows" src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/LoLaS-150x150.jpg" alt="Lady of Light and Shadows" width="150" height="150" /></p>
<p><strong>DC: Would you give our readers an overall look at the Tairen Soul series, how it came about, and has it evolved as you originally envisioned it?</strong></p>
<p>CW: How much time do we have?  LOL.  Tairen Soul – the original manuscript and the series – was the product of me examining my two favorite genres (fantasy and romance) and my favorite (and bestselling) novels in those genres and trying to figure out (a) what made them so appealing to me and (b) how I could combine all my favorite things into one book.</p>
<p>It originally started out as a single book, more romance than fantasy.  But then I decided to put my <a title="JRR Tolkien" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._R._R._Tolkien" target="_blank">JRR Tolkien</a>-inspired spin on the book—creating my own language, writing poetry, etc.—and it really took on a life of its own.  Then, after 9-11, the story took on more depth, more meaning, and I began to use the plot and the difficulties confronting Rain and Ellysetta to work out my own personal struggles over the events of 9-11.  I began to use the book to examine in my own small way the nature of good and evil, and the ideals of honor and freedom and sacrifice.  I’ve even found myself changing some long held personal beliefs during the course of writing the books.</p>
<p><strong>DC: Do you ever argue with your characters while you&#8217;re writing? Who usually wins?</strong></p>
<p>CW: LOL…I don’t argue with them.  I call them names occasionally.  I also talk to myself in the shower (and sometimes elsewhere).  If I do it around my kids, they just roll their eyes and say, “Mom’s talking to herself again.”</p>
<p><strong>DC: What is sure to distract you from sitting down and working/writing?</strong></p>
<p>CW: A phone call from a friend.  Not that I mind.  I love my friends and love to hear from them.  Email can also distract me, but I try to keep that under control.</p>
<p><strong>DC: Though Rain is the hero throughout the series, a lot of your fans have fallen in love with a number of other heroes – Bel, Gaelen, and a good many of Ellie’s Guard. First, did this surprise you at all?  And is there a chance any of these characters may get their own book in the future?</strong></p>
<p>CW: No, it didn’t surprise me.  *I* fell in love with those secondary characters too .   At the moment, I’m contracted for a book about Bel and another about Gaelen.  As for the rest, the gods weave as the gods will   I have far more ideas than I have time to write them all!</p>
<p><strong>DC: What has been your favorite book cover from all of your releases and why?</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960604/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignright" title="Queen of Song and Souls" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960604.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="97" height="160" /></a>CW: <em>Queen of Song and Souls</em>, hands down.  All of Judy’s (<a title="Judy York" href="http://www.judyyork.com/" target="_blank">Judy York</a>, the cover artist) covers are gorgeous, but <em>Queen</em> is positively stunning.  It has a romantic fantasy feel.  Ellysetta looks every bit as beautiful and regal as I imagined her Fey self to be.  I love the silhouettes of the tairen flying in the sky.  And I loved the stone tairen Judy put at the entrance to Dharsa on the back cover.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><strong>DC: <em>Queen of Song and Souls</em>, the fourth book in the series, released just last week.  Would you give us a look inside and let fans know what to expect in this edition?</strong></p>
<p>CW: <em>Queen</em> was supposed to be the final installment of Rain and Ellysetta’s story, but my idea of a book and a publisher’s idea of a book are about 200-300 pages apart!   So, <em>Queen</em> has become something of a “bridging” book that sets up the final chapter – <em>Tairen Soul</em>, in which all secrets will at last be revealed, all enemies confronted, all plots and subplots merged and concluded.</p>
<p><em>Queen</em> primarily deals with Rain and Ellysetta’s last ditch efforts to gather the ancient magical allies to confront the High Mage of Eld’s vast army, Ellysetta finally learning the truth about her past and her purpose, and the coming-to-fruition of the evil High Mage’s plans for Celieria.</p>
<p>When <em>Tairen Soul</em> (book 5) begins, everything is going to start rushing headlong toward the cataclysmic climax I’ve been working towards these past four years.  I’m really looking forward to writing the “Big Finale” which I’ve deliberately held off writing, because that is my reward for getting everything else completed.</p>
<p><strong>DC: How about your least favorite cover?  Why?</strong></p>
<p>CW: I have a least favorite, but I’m not going to share it.   There’s enough negativity in the world without me adding to it </p>
<p><strong>DC: How do you feel your male or female characters have evolved over your career? Do you think you write them differently now than you did when you started?</strong></p>
<p>CW: I don’t think I have enough of a career yet to answer this question.</p>
<p><strong>DC: More great news concerning the series is that there will be a fifth book. Tell me your fans aren’t delighted about that! May we get a sneak peek into that story? Please??</strong></p>
<p>CW: Ha!  Nope.  It’s still a work in progress.  I will say it’s going to be full of action and surprises.  And I think all the readers who’ve been waiting for Rain and Ellysetta’s story to play out will not be disappointed.  There are quite a few readers who’ve written me over the years with their ideas of what’s going to happen.  Some of those will probably crow, “I knew it!” in a couple of places, but several others will likely say, “No way!  How did I miss that?”</p>
<p>I’m very excited about the book – probably more excited than I’ve been since typing “THE END” on the first Tairen Soul manuscript 4 years ago.</p>
<p><strong>DC: Is there a genre you haven&#8217;t tackled but would like to try?</strong></p>
<p>CW: There are genres I’ve tackled as an unpublished author that I would like to get back to (contemporary romance, for one, maybe a little light romantic comedy).  I also have a YA fantasy I’ve been promising my children for years that I would write for them.  I think that’s going to be my afternoon project once I get TS finished and off to the editor.</p>
<p><strong>DC: What advice would you give to your younger self?</strong></p>
<p>CW: Believe in yourself.  Don’t smoke.  And buy stock in Google!</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" title="Lord of the Fading Lands" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959770.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a><strong>DC: The Tairen Soul from the series has been immortalized in the art world. Artist <a title="Heather Carr" href="http://www.darkparadise.org/" target="_blank">Heather Carr</a> has painted your famed winged cat, titled it &#8220;Arrival in the High Reaches,&#8221; and done a beautiful job. Have you talked to her personally about what inspired her to do the painting, if she’s read your books and what she thought? What was your reaction when heard about this and then saw the actual rendition?</strong></p>
<p>CW: Yes.  Heather actually contacted me after reading <a title="Lord of the Fading Lands" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><em>Lord of the Fading Lands</em></a>, which she picked up specifically because of the tairen on the back cover.  She’s a professional wildlife artist, but she wrote to tell me she used to sketch bat-winged panthers when she was in high school, and told me my books had inspired her to pick those fantasy art sketches back up.  That led to a couple of paintings straight from the books themselves (“Steli chakai” and “Tairen’s Play”) and countless sketches waiting to be turned into paintings. She’s amazingly talented!</p>
<p>Honestly, when I look at her paintings, it’s as if she’s crawled into my brain and pull the pictures straight from my own imagination.  They are perfect.  Absolutely perfect.  She’s managed to bring my visions to life.</p>
<p>We’ve had several phone conversations, lots of email chats, and she came out to visit not long ago and we sat down to discuss the possibility of some collaborative projects.  I hope to have some exciting news to announce very soon!</p>
<p><strong>DC: If you were a book, what would your blurb be?</strong></p>
<p>CW: Try me. You’ll like me. :p</p>
<p><strong>DC: What would be your “voice’s” tagline?</strong></p>
<p>CW: Oh shoot. I don’t know.  Lush and evocative, maybe.  Or…Godiva for the brain: smooth, rich and deliciously addictive.  (I think I’m hungry now.)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img class="alignright" title="King of Sword and Sky" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960590.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></a><strong>DC: I know you’ve gotten a lot of mail since readers have been discovering your books. Are there maybe a couple that really stand out or have touched you more than any others?</strong></p>
<p>CW: You know, trying to answer this sent me on a six-hour detour through my mail box, twitter, facebook, etc.  I am sooo ADD.  Ah, well, back to the subject at hand.</p>
<p>I have had some truly, truly touching emails from readers who said my books helped them through the death of a loved one, through their own or a family member’s deployment in Iraq, and a very special one from a lady who wrote to thank me because her learning-disabled teenager read a book cover to cover for the first time – and that book was Lord of the Fading Lands.  Most of all, I go back and read the outpouring of encouragement from readers who write me—often saying I’m the first author they’ve ever written—to tell me how much my books have touched their lives, how much they love the world I’ve created, and how much they hope I’ll continue to write about the characters they’ve come to love.</p>
<p>It’s a blessing—a real, honest-to-goodness blessing—to know that my books have touched so many people.  But it works both ways.  Because I’ve touched them, they write to me and touch me with their words too.  And I am so grateful to be here, living this life, sharing experiences with so many amazing people.</p>
<p><strong>DC: If you had never become an author, what do you think you would be doing right now?</strong></p>
<p>CW: Probably what I was doing before I was an author – marketing communications and training for high tech companies.</p>
<p><strong>DC: There’s a language unto itself throughout the series. Is this an actual language or one from your imagination just as the entire story itself is?</strong></p>
<p>CW: I created Feyan.  Words are like music to me, and I love to put them together in interesting ways.  I’m always creating words and throwing them into conversation for the fun of it.   Creating Feyan was a bit like jamming with phonemes.  I built a syntax based on a mix of English and French and established root words that I transform into other words based on meanings.  I try to spell somewhat phonetically, though I use romance language pronunciations mixed in with English phonetics.  It’s been loads of fun.  I’m not an uber nerd, but I am a word geek.</p>
<p><strong>DC: Any other works in progress you can tell us about?</strong></p>
<p>CW: Until I finish <em>Tairen Soul</em>, I don’t feel comfortable working on another project.</p>
<p><strong>DC: What’s on the horizon for C.L. Wilson?</strong></p>
<p>CW: Once <em>Tairen Soul</em> is complete, I will be revising my novel, <em>Winter King</em>, (an alternate-world set fantasy I can’t wait to get back to again.) and probably working on my YA fantasy or a contemporary fantasy novel running around in my brain.   After <em>Winter King</em>, it’s back to the Fading Lands to write Bel’s story, and then Gaelen’s story.</p>
<p><strong>Lightning Round:</strong></p>
<p>- dark or milk chocolate?     &#8211; Milk.  Godiva, preferably.<br />
- smooth or chunky peanut butter?     &#8211; Smooth!<br />
- heels or flats?      &#8211; Flats. I’m a comfort girl.<br />
- coffee or tea?    &#8211; Coffee.  Well actually, coffee in the am.  Decaf Green or Herbal tea in the afternoon.<br />
- summer or winter?    &#8211; Winter  Most preferred: Spring and Fall <br />
- mountains or beach?    &#8211; Mountains overlooking the ocean!<br />
- mustard or mayonnaise?    &#8211; Mayo<br />
- flowers or candy?      &#8211; BOTH<br />
- pockets or purse?    &#8211; purse<br />
- Pepsi or Coke? neither.     &#8211; The only carbonation I drink comes in beer or champagne. :p<br />
- ebook or print?     &#8211; Print</p>
<p><strong>And because we still enjoy the answers we get:</strong></p>
<p>1. What is your favorite word?     &#8211; Changes all the time.  Exquisite is one.  Masticate is another, just because it sounds so naughty but isn’t.   Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.  Scrumpdillyicious.   Generally, however, I love words that evoke emotion.<br />
2. What is your least favorite word?     &#8211; Vagina and Penis. They just sound so…clinical and harsh.  Racial and ethnic slurs.<br />
3. What turns you on creatively, spiritually or emotionally?     &#8211; Sunshine. Laughter.  Bright spring days.  Blue skies dotted with puffy white clouds.  Fresh fallen snow.  Majestic mountain forests, lush and green and seemingly endless.  Nature. Children.  Love and laughter.  Stars at night.<br />
4. What turns you off creatively, spiritually or emotionally?    &#8211; Negativity.  Personal betrayal. Book piracy.<br />
5. What sound or noise do you love?     &#8211; Falling water; waves crashing on the beach; thunder in the distance.  My children laughing.<br />
6. What sound or noise do you hate?    &#8211; Fluttering wings against my office window- or anywhere near me.  (I’m something of an ornithophobe, though my fears are *not* irrational.  Birds consistently and frequently dive bomb me- any time I’m in an open air restaurant, and frequently when I’m driving my car.  I love large, beautiful birds – at a distance! Eagles, flamingos, herons, peregrine falcons, etc. Hate, hate, HATE pigeons.  Ew. Rats with wings. )<br />
7. What is your favorite curse word?    -  One of the seven ones you can’t say on TV.  (and for those George Carlin fans out there &#8211; it’s not poopoo/doodoo/good old number 2)   But it usually only flies out when I’m angry, and then the little booger just won’t be silenced!<br />
8. What profession other than your own would you like to attempt?     &#8211; This is it for me. I am doing my dream job.  Of course, I wouldn’t turn down a chance to be a beauty queen, an astronaut, or Empress of All She Surveys.<br />
9. What profession would you not like to do?     &#8211; Clean bedpans. clean sewers. Deal with decomposing bodies.  Anything that involves smells that make you gag.<br />
10. If Heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the Pearly Gates?     -  I know Heaven exists.  And though I’d like to hear, “Well done, Cheryl.  Well done.”  I expect I’ll hear instead, “You’re late.  AGAIN.”</p>
<p><strong>DC: Cheryl, what a pleasure it&#8217;s been to have you here! Thank you so much!</strong></p>
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		<title>REVIEW: King of Sword and Sky by C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2008/11/08/review-king-of-sword-and-sky-by-cl-wilson/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2008/11/08/review-king-of-sword-and-sky-by-cl-wilson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2008 06:00:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gwen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2008]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grade A]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gwen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[King of Sword and Sky]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leisure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[September 2008]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Gwen&#8217;s review of King of Sword and Sky (Tairen Soul Series, Book 3) by C.L. Wilson Fantasy (romance) released by Leisure Books 30 Sep 08 Well, damn.  You know that feeling when you&#8217;ve read a book that just blows you completely away, and you don&#8217;t want to read another one for a little while so [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960590.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" style="width: 99px; height: 160px; margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px" title="King of Sword and Sky by C.L. Wilson" alt="Book Cover" align="left" width="99" height="160" hspace="5" /></a>Gwen&#8217;s review of <strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" title="buy the book" target="_blank">King of Sword and Sky (Tairen Soul Series, Book 3)</a></strong> by <a href="http://www.clwilson.com/" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson</a><br />
<em>Fantasy (romance) released by Leisure Books 30 Sep 08</em></p>
<p>Well, damn.  You know that feeling when you&#8217;ve read a book that just blows you completely away, and you don&#8217;t want to read another one for a little while so you don&#8217;t ruin the buzz?  Well I had that feeling for about a week after I read this book.  I. Was. THAT. Blown. Away.  </p>
<p>I don&#8217;t gush often.  Very few books (or movies or anything really) strike me as worthy of a gush.  But let me gush for a little bit on this book.  The first two books were good, but this one was GREAT. With the first two, I <a href="http://goodbadandunread.com/2007/11/06/review-lord-of-the-fading-lands-lady-of-light-and-shadows-by-cl-wilson/" target="_blank" title="Gwen's review of Books 1 &amp; 2">bemoaned </a>the lack of forward momentum.  It seemed like we were reading about every little detail of these peoples&#8217; lives for a LOT of pages (they&#8217;ve all been long books).  This book definitely didn&#8217;t lack forward momentum.  In fact, I couldn&#8217;t put it down for almost two days straight.  The tot wanted to know what I was reading that had me breathless, I was that engrossed.</p>
<p>I won&#8217;t give any spoilers except to say that in the beginning of the book we are still waiting for Ellysetta to complete the soul bond with Rain.  This bond will make Rain and Elly strong and nearly impervious to the dark influences in both their lives.  This inability to complete the bond lent a heartbreaking note to this couple&#8217;s relationship.  It kept me grounded in what little bit of reality was possible with a series set in an alternate world full of magic and supernatural beings.</p>
<p>Elly matures and evolves in <em>King</em>.  Her character begins as the rather small, former mortal and, by the end of the book, becomes so much more.  I am sincerely in awe of how she grows thru the book.  I can&#8217;t wait to see what she does in the fourth entry.  It should just blow our socks off.</p>
<p>There are many twists and turns in <em>King</em>.  I never quite knew how sub-arcs were going to turn out.  I love it when an author is able to surprise me.  I love it even more when I want to read ahead but I don&#8217;t dare because I might miss something.  My eyes were literally glued to the page, one after another, consuming this book in large chunks.</p>
<p>If you aren&#8217;t following this series, I don&#8217;t recommend starting with this one.  The story is involved, full of detail past and present, and because it&#8217;s so much fun to read, why would you NOT read the earlier books.</p>
<p>I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves fantasy &#8211; it&#8217;s a terrific fantasy novel, even without the romantic elements, which are present but in a perfectly delightful way, are not the key driver of the book.  It&#8217;s a fresh, new twist of these genres.  I loved it.</p>
<p><img src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/faye.jpg" style="width: 100px; height: 100px; margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px" alt="faye.jpg" title="Gwens Icon" align="left" width="100" height="100" hspace="5" /><strong>Grade: A+</strong></p>
<p>Read all the TGTBTU reviews and info of this series by following the <a href="http://goodbadandunread.com/index.php?s=Tairen+Soul" target="_blank">Tairen Soul Series tag</a>.</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Summary:</strong></p>
<p>Returning to the Fading Lands with his Celierian truemate, Rain discovers a dissension among the most powerful members of his own council. As the Eld plot their next deadly strike, Ellysetta struggles to master her powerful magic and discover how to save the tairen, while Rain confronts open challenge to his rule and prepares to lead the Fey army to war.</p>
<p><strong>Read an <a href="http://www.clwilson.com/TS_King%20of%20Sword%20and%20Sky.pdf" target="_blank">excerpt</a>.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Other books in the series:</p>
<table border="0">
<tr>
<td><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959770.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" title="Book 1, 2 Oct 2007" alt="Book Cover" /></a></td>
<td><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959789/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959789.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" title="Book 2, 30 Oct 2007" alt="Book Cover" /></a></td>
<td><img src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/queen-of-song-and-souls-by-cl-wilson.jpg" style="width: 99px; height: 160px" title="Book 4, 2 Jun 09" alt="Book Cover" width="99" height="160" /></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p width="100%" align="center">&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>REVIEW: King of Sword and Sky by C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2008/10/07/review-king-of-sword-and-sky-tarien-soul-series-book-3-by-cl-wilson/</link>
		<comments>http://goodbadandunread.com/2008/10/07/review-king-of-sword-and-sky-tarien-soul-series-book-3-by-cl-wilson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Oct 2008 06:00:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2008]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grade A]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[King of Sword and Sky]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leisure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Sandy M&#8217;s review of King of Sword and Sky (Tairen Soul Series, Book 3) by C.L. Wilson Fantasy Paranormal Romance published by Leisure 30 Sep 08 If you have not read this series of C.W. Wilson&#8217;s, you are missing out on some so spectacularly special.  Ms. Wilson weaves her brand of magic in the pages [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843960590.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" style="float: left; width: 99px; height: 160px; margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px" title="King of Sword and Sky" alt="King of Sword and Sky" align="left" width="99" height="160" hspace="5" /></a>Sandy M&#8217;s review of <strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843960590/thgothbaanthu-20" alt="Book Cover" target="_blank" title="King of Sword and Sky">King of Sword and Sky (Tairen Soul Series, Book 3)</a> </strong> by <a href="http://www.clwilson.com/index.htm" target="_blank" title="C.L. Wilson">C.L. Wilson</a><br />
<em>Fantasy Paranormal Romance published by Leisure 30 Sep 08</em></p>
<p>If you have not read this series of C.W. Wilson&#8217;s, you are missing out on some so spectacularly special.  Ms. Wilson weaves her brand of magic in the pages of this beautiful fantasy world of the Fading Lands where the Fey and the tairen live. Her characters of full of honor and dignity, heart and passion, and, of course, love.  The villainy she etches into her evil characters only causes you to root for the good of her hero and heroine to triumph.  And her imagination is simply amazing.  You just <em>have</em> to read this series!  </p>
<p>In this book we finally get to the Fading Lands.  We&#8217;ve been reading about them and waiting for them since the first book.  But even before that we have to endure the Faering Mist with Rain, King of the Fey and the Tairen Soul, and Ellysetta, his truemate, daughter of a wood carver.  The Mist is a barrier around the Fading Lands to keep all within its borders safe from evil, especially the Mages of Eld, who are on the rise once again after being vanquished in the Mage Wars a thousand years ago.</p>
<p>Their entourage makes it through the Mist relatively unscathed &#8212; it&#8217;s Rain and Ellie who are delayed by their past that the Mist throws in their path, doubling their fears and vulnerabilities.  Coming together, however, they fight their way through so that Rain can ready his men for the war that is sure to break out with Eld and Ellie can begin her search for answers to save the tairen.</p>
<p>From the mists of Ms. Wilson&#8217;s imagination, the tairen are large, very large, cats with wings and are able to breath fire.  My favorite scenes are Ellysetta flying through the air toward the sky on Rain&#8217;s back.  They&#8217;re breathtaking.  Ellie arrives too late to save the most recent truemated pair and one of their kitlings from the mysterious deaths that have plagued the tairen for so long.  It become&#8217;s Ellie mission to save the remaining kitlings, which forces her to do something she never thought she would do, even knowing Rain would be disappointed in her.</p>
<p>In the meantime, Rain must make opitmal use of his men in order to defeat the High Mage who is out for more and more power, and he knows that&#8217;s related in some way to his truemate.  This Mage is one mean and ugly villain.  He uses torture to keep a truemated pair in captivity to do his bidding, healing him when he comes face to face with Ellie&#8217;s magic or he uses too much of his own for his twisted purposes.</p>
<p>Rain even goes so far as to train his men in the ways of forbidden magic, asking Gaelen, a newly restored Fey who was banished from the Fading Lands when he turned to forbidden magic.  He also has to fight the Massan, the council of the Fading Lands, those who governed when Rain spent years in his madness following the death of his heart mate during the wars.  Danger and evil come at him and Ellie from every corner and it&#8217;s only together they will find all the answers they need to save their world and those they love.</p>
<p>You will be amazed and mesmerized by Ms. Wilson&#8217;s writing.  You will be under her characters&#8217; spell completely after just a few pages.  You will not be able to put these books down once you start reading.  And you must start reading at the beginning.  Don&#8217;t think you will be able to figure out what&#8217;s going by picking up this third book.  Pick them all up at once and start at the beginning.  You will not be disappointed.  Even the secondary characters are so well written that several of them will become your favorites before you know it.</p>
<p>Even if you&#8217;re aren&#8217;t a fantasy reader, do not let that stop you.  I made that mistake myself early on, and once I finally began reading Lord of the Fading Lands, I was hooked in no time at all.  And you will be too.  I can pretty much guarantee it.</p>
<p><strong><img src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/sandym-icon.jpg" alt="SandyM" style="margin-left: 5px; width: 114px; margin-right: 5px; height: 114px" title="SandyM" align="left" width="114" height="114" hspace="5" />Grade: A+</strong></p>
<p>Read more reviews of this and other books by clicking on the <a href="http://goodbadandunread.com/tag/tairen-soul-series/" target="_blank" title="TSS tag">Tairen Soul Series tag</a>.</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>     Summary:</strong></p>
<p>Returning to the Fading Lands with his Celierian truemate, Rain discovers a dissension among the most powerful members of his own council. As the Eld plot their next deadly strike, Ellysetta struggles to master her powerful magic and discover how to save the tairen, while Rain confronts open challenge to his rule and prepares to lead the Fey army to war.</p>
<p><strong>     Read an <a href="http://www.clwilson.com/TS_King%20of%20Sword%20and%20Sky.pdf" target="_blank">excerpt</a>.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Other books in this series:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959770.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" style="float: left; width: 99px; height: 160px" title="Lord of the Fading Lands" alt="Lord of the Fading Lands" align="left" width="99" height="160" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959789/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959789.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" style="width: 99px; height: 160px; margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px" title="Lady of Light and Shadows" alt="Lady of Light and Shadows" align="left" width="99" height="160" hspace="5" /></a></p>
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		<title>REVIEW: Lord of the Fading Lands &amp; Lady of Light and Shadows by C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2007/11/06/review-lord-of-the-fading-lands-lady-of-light-and-shadows-by-cl-wilson/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Nov 2007 19:00:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Gwen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2007]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grade B]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gwen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lady of Light and Shadows]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leisure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lord of the Fading Lands]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[October 2007]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Gwen&#8217;s review of Lord of the Fading Lands (Tairen Soul Series, Book 1) and Lady of Light and Shadows (Tairen Soul Series, Book 2) by C.L. Wilson Paranormal/fantasy romance published by Leisure 2 &#38; 30 Oct 07 I wrestled with how to review these two books.  When I read one of Wilson&#8217;s interviews, I figured [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959770.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" title="Book Cover" align="left" hspace="5" /></a><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959789/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959789.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" title="Book Cover" align="left" hspace="5" /></a>Gwen&#8217;s review of <strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank">Lord of the Fading Lands (Tairen Soul Series, Book 1)</a> </strong>and<strong> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959789/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank">Lady of Light and Shadows (Tairen Soul Series, Book 2)</a></strong> by <a href="http://www.clwilson.com/" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson</a><strong><br />
</strong><em>Paranormal/fantasy romance published by Leisure </em><em>2 &amp; 30 Oct 07</em></p>
<p>I wrestled with how to review these two books.  When I read one of Wilson&#8217;s interviews, I figured out why it was so difficult: she wrote these two books originally as one really large book and, presumably for publishing purposes, she had to split them. It is truly difficult to review these as two separate books, the story is just too vast.  </p>
<p>Well.  Vast and yet very narrow.  The pacing of the books is very deliberate and extraordinarily slow.  Both books take place over only about a three week period.  So imagine almost 800 pages of text discussing three weeks and you get an idea of to what level of detail Wilson discusses the characters&#8217; daily events.  All that was missing was every fart and burp.  And I say that with only the utmost of admiration of the world Wilson has created.  Which takes me to the &#8220;vast&#8221; part of my statement.</p>
<p>Wilson has created an amazing world in these books.  It&#8217;s a world that is rich with history and atmosphere.  You can practically see the city where most of the books take place.  The secondary characters are complex people/beings and the villains are truly evil.  The level of detail is a bit astonishing.</p>
<p>You may wish for the books&#8217; pace to pick up, but they&#8217;re still very fun to read.  In addition to rich detail, you have a wonderful love story with Rain and Ellie.  I&#8217;m really looking forward to the next installments, coming at the end of next year.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/faye.jpg" alt="faye.jpg" title="faye.jpg" align="left" hspace="10" /><strong>Grade (both books): B+</strong></p>
<blockquote><p><strong>LofFL blurb:</strong></p>
<p>Long ago, in the magical holocaust known as the Mage Wars, the immortal Fey and their allies fought to defeat the grasping evil of the Elden Mages and their dark-gifted supporters. During those wars, in a fit of grief-induced madness caused by the death of his mate, Fey shapeshifter Rain Tairen Soul nearly destroyed the world in a blaze of tairen fire.</p>
<p>Now, a thousand years later, the fierce Fey king must fight to save his race from the brink of extinction and once again stop the evil rising in the homeland of his enemies, the Eld. The key to his success lies in the mortal city of Celieria, where the Mage Wars began, and with a young woman whose soul sings to him in ways no woman ever has, whose presence reawakens the primal fury of the tairen within his soul, and whose vast, untapped power can either save or destroy him and his people.</p>
<p><strong>LotFL <a href="http://www.clwilson.com/TS_Lord%20of%20the%20Fading%20Lands.pdf" target="_blank">excerpt</a>.</strong></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p><strong>LoLaS blurb:</strong></p>
<p>Since her earliest memories, Ellysetta Baristani has feared magic, even as she has been inexorably drawn to all things Fey, especially the poetry and legends of Rain Tairen Soul. Now claimed as Rain&#8217;s truemate and no longer able to deny her own magic, Ellysetta is swept into the very center of a struggle filled with the magic and darkness she has always feared. The High Mage of Eld wants to capture her. The most murderous <em>dahl-reisen</em> who ever lived wants her dead. And her enemies will corrupt even the people she loves most in their quest to claim her magic for themselves.</p>
<p><strong>LoLaS <a href="http://www.clwilson.com/TS_Lady%20of%20Light%20and%20Shadows.pdf" target="_blank">excerpt</a>.</strong></p></blockquote>
<p><em>What&#8217;s next for this author:</em></p>
<p>Third and fourth books in the Tairen Soul Series, published by Dorchester Publishing.  Tentatively titled <strong><em>King of Sword and Sky</em></strong> (Oct &#8217;08) and <em><strong>Queen of Song and Souls</strong></em> (Nov &#8217;08), the books conclude the epic adventures of Rain Tairen Soul and his truemate Ellysetta Baristani.</p>
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		<title>REVIEW: Lord of the Fading Lands by C.L. Wilson</title>
		<link>http://goodbadandunread.com/2007/09/28/review-lord-of-the-fading-lands-by-cl-wilson/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Sep 2007 19:11:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sandy M</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2007]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C.L. Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fantasy Romance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grade A]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leisure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lord of the Fading Lands]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[October 2007]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sandy M]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tairen Soul Series]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[SandyM&#8217;s review of Lord of the Fading Lands by C.L. Wilson Fantasy/paranormal romance published Oct 2, 2007 by Leisure (Dorchester) I have found my book of the year.  Maybe even my book of the decade.  C.L. Wilson&#8217;s LORD OF THE FADING LANDS is simply wonderful, fantastic, terrific.  How easily I have to eat my words.  [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959770.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg" alt="Book Cover" title="Book Cover" align="left" hspace="10" /></a>SandyM&#8217;s review of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959770/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><strong>Lord of the Fading Lands</strong></a> by <a href="http://www.clwilson.com/" target="_blank">C.L. Wilson</a><br />
<em>Fantasy/paranormal romance published Oct 2, 2007 by </em><a href="http://www.dorchesterpub.com/Dorch/productdetail.cfm?product_id=1940&amp;L1=2" target="_blank"><em>Leisure (Dorchester)</em></a></p>
<p>I have found my book of the year.  Maybe even my book of the decade.  C.L. Wilson&#8217;s LORD OF THE FADING LANDS is simply wonderful, fantastic, terrific.  How easily I have to eat my words.  When I first looked at the cover of this book, I thought, &#8220;Uh-oh, I have a feeling I&#8217;m not going to like this one, it&#8217;s fantasy.&#8221;  Now, I don&#8217;t have a thing against fantasy books.  I just love my historicals and paranormals more, so I don&#8217;t read many fantasies.  Even as much as I loved LotFL, I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;m going to be a 100% lover of fantasies (I will give some a try here and there, however), but I&#8217;m definitely now a die-hard fan of C.L. Wilson&#8217;s.  </p>
<p>After fighting in the Mage Wars a thousand years ago, losing his heartmate in those wars, and also losing himself in grief so deeply that he breathed fire on half the world, burning anything and everything in his wake, Rain Tairen Soul is coming out of his self-imposed reclusiveness to save his people, the fey, and the tairen.</p>
<p>Being a woodcarver&#8217;s daughter has brought a happy to life to Ellysetta Baristani.  She has a long-standing fascination of all things fey, and has yet to meet the man who can capture her heart.  Trying to put the wretch who is courting her out of her mind, she eagerly agrees to take her sisters to brave the crowds that will gather to see Rain Tairen Soul when he visits her town, Celieria, after so many years.</p>
<p>Once Rain finds Ellysetta, his body and soul respond to her as they never have for another and as hasn&#8217;t happened in over a thousand years.  The more he knows of his truemate, the more he knows that she has hidden magic within her.  Elly is definitely falling in love with Rain and all that he is.</p>
<p>C.L. Wilson is the best at painting a magical world that has never been seen before, at creating characters with depth and integrity, and giving readers true romance and a love story for all time.  Rain and Elly are the most engaging and romantic hero and heroine that has come along in a very long time.  The secondary characters are all wonderful, but Elly&#8217;s fey guards are my favorite.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959789/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank"><img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0843959789.01.THUMBZZZ.jpg" style="float: right; margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 10px; width: 47px; height: 75px" alt="Book Cover" title="Book Cover" align="right" width="47" height="75" hspace="10" /></a>This is a book that you will not be able to put down, literally.  So much happens so quickly that I think if you blink, you&#8217;ll miss something!  And LotFL is only the beginning; there are three more books scheduled.  <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0843959789/thgothbaanthu-20" target="_blank">LADY OF LIGHT AND SHADOWS</a> is the second, out Oct 30, 2007.  So if you hurry, you still have plenty of time to purchase the book (now books) of the decade!</p>
<p><img src="http://goodbadandunread.com/wp-content/gallery/review-icons/sandym-icon.jpg" style="width: 114px; height: 114px; margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px" alt="sandym-icon.jpg" title="Sandys Icon" align="left" width="114" height="114" hspace="5" /><strong>Grade: A+</strong></p>
<blockquote><p>Back cover blurb:</p>
<p>Once he had loved with such passion, his name was legend &#8212; Tarien Soul. Now a thousand years later, a new threat calls him from the Fading Lands, back into the world that had cost him so dearly. Now an ancient, familiar evil is regaining its strength, and a new voice beckons him &#8212; more compelling, more seductive, more maddening than any before. As the power of his most bitter enemy grows and ancient alliances crumble, the wildness in his blood will not be denied. The tairen must claim his truemate and embrace the destiny woven for him in the mists of time.</p>
<p><strong>Read an <a href="http://www.dorchesterpub.com/Dorch/SpecialFeatures.cfm?Special_ID=2318" target="_blank">excerpt</a>.</strong></p></blockquote>
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