Rebel Queen by David Temrick - Book Tour + Giveaway
Rebel Queen
Dragonkin Chronicles Book 1
by David Temrick
Genre:
Fantasy
Fantasy
Cassandra has a problem, and it's only the first of many. Being raised as the
youngest child in a family of great heroes would be a challenge for
anyone.
youngest child in a family of great heroes would be a challenge for
anyone.
Until a few days ago, Cassandra was content with her role as a child of
greatness. She was studious, spent most of her waking hours with her
mother and other heads of state and at her father’s insistence,
learned how to duel. As her siblings had before her, Cassandra knew
she would likely be matched with a partner for political reasons and
had long since accepted her role in the world.
greatness. She was studious, spent most of her waking hours with her
mother and other heads of state and at her father’s insistence,
learned how to duel. As her siblings had before her, Cassandra knew
she would likely be matched with a partner for political reasons and
had long since accepted her role in the world.
That was, of course, before her mother died, and before
her...transformation. Overnight, her soft pale skin sprouted gorgeous
golden dragon scales.
her...transformation. Overnight, her soft pale skin sprouted gorgeous
golden dragon scales.
Presented with a future she no longer recognizes, as the first of her kind, she
must overcome a whole new set of challenges if she hopes to survive
the unknown threat that comes from across the Careless Sea.
must overcome a whole new set of challenges if she hopes to survive
the unknown threat that comes from across the Careless Sea.
The Sakwa dragonkin are a dying race, fueled by a tribal system that
failed them centuries ago but yet unable to adapt to a new way of
life. In a desperate bid to keep the people focused on outside
conflict, Jenya of the Toho has declared war on Cassandra's country.
An ocean may separate the two cultures, but the Sakwa see the Seven
Kingdoms as their opportunity for a new start; a new start they will
willingly kill and die for.
failed them centuries ago but yet unable to adapt to a new way of
life. In a desperate bid to keep the people focused on outside
conflict, Jenya of the Toho has declared war on Cassandra's country.
An ocean may separate the two cultures, but the Sakwa see the Seven
Kingdoms as their opportunity for a new start; a new start they will
willingly kill and die for.
Rebel Queen
Chapter 1
Assessment
It always seemed like the castle burst to life after hibernating
for months and then after a few weeks of activity, everyone sat around moodily waiting
for the rains to subside.
Draconis wrapped his enormous wings closer to his body as the
storm’s ferocity intensified. At this elevation, the elder dragon need only
spread his wings to be launched off of this mountaintop. The last of the spring
storms were blowing with their usual bluster and Midsummer was fast
approaching. All of the ice and snow had melted away, leaving large, lush
patches of grass and wildflowers around him.
Soon the summer heat would be in full effect, which would have
made Mina happy as her gardens would begin to blossom and grow. In the three
years since her passing, her daughter Cassandra had taken up her mother’s
gardening duties. The central courtyard had been converted into a large fruit
and vegetable garden with flower beds scattered all over the palace grounds.
Dragon Hold was high up in the southeastern mountains of Vallius
where the weather was clement year round, however the spring rains wouldn’t
stop until well into summer. There were precious few weeks, as winter released
its grasp and spring began to assert itself, when farmers and gardeners could
get their seeds planted in time for the nourishing rain.
When the Dragon Host had first arrived in Amesdia, they had
taken to tampering with the weather. Their goal had been to turn each country
into a reflection of the dragons that chose to live there. This was ideal for
the Draconic race; however it was an anathema to everyone else.
So, centuries ago, the Dragon Council had decided that nature
had to be allowed to run its course. As a result, the dragon host focused on
using their arts to take the pressure off of the magma chambers far below the
surface of Terum in an attempt to make the area, and indeed the entire
continent, more habitable.
Terum, as a result, had developed into a vibrant and productive
farming country. Her people were robust, quick to laugh and opened their hearts
and arms to the others when they were in need.
Oceana had once been a swampy mess of overgrown marshlands mixed
with large swaths of cooled lava. With the intervention of the dragon host,
most of the country was now above the water table. They were able to sow crops
as well; the produce they grew had become the envy of the Seven Kingdoms. All
of this had transpired before Tristan’s birth and yet Draconis remembered the
details as sharply today as he did the flavor of the mountain goat he’d inhaled
just this morning.
The winds began to die down and the rain stopped and the clouds
began to break up as Draconis continued to be lost in thought. What troubled
him today, and what had been troubling him for a fortnight, was Cassandra’s
sudden transformation.
Sudden might not be the right word, but it seemed to be the only
one that could capture the scope of the shock and awe his great-granddaughter
caused when she walked into a room. Her eyes had possessed a violet tint since
the night her mother had died, but two weeks ago after a rather brutal
thunderstorm had destroyed the southern watch tower, she had come down from her
room covered in golden dragon scales from head to toe.
He and two of his closest friends, Socolis the elder white
dragon and Lesariu the elder gold, had spent days debating and examining
Cassie’s transformation. At the time of her birth, both Mina and Tristan
appeared to be two normal middle aged adults, despite being in their nineties.
Their youngest child had grandchildren of his own and it was thought that their
child bearing years had long since passed them by.
Yet, as Mina’s stomach expanded with her appetite, it had become
clear that despite her age, Lesariu’s granddaughter was again with child. After
Cassie had been born, Mina had begun to age alarmingly though. In the first
five years, Mina looked every bit her age. By the time Cassie was ten, Mina’s
hair had gone completely white and she was very nearly skin and bone.
Cassie was the spitting image of her mother in her youth and on
more than one occasion Tristan had expressed concern that the curse the Gods
had inflicted on him must surely have passed to his daughter. How he could be so
dismissive about the gateway and so concerned about his daughter inheriting a
curse he’d accepted always seemed to amuse Socolis, but he found humor in the
strangest things.
Regardless, something had clearly happened to Mina, either
during the pregnancy or afterwards. It was unclear as to what that had been, so
their concerns had shifted to her daughter. It was undeniable that Cassie had
intelligence and ability that far exceeded her age. At eleven, she could hold
her own in debates with the adult ambassadors who frequently visited Dragon
Hold.
What did cause no end of concern for Draconis though, were the
possible ramifications of her appearance. The Orcs had been created by the
mating of a dragon and an elf. Would Cassie remain Cassie, or would she somehow
lose her mind as the orc hordes had lost theirs on their former home world of
Fangoria?
The sun began to break through the clouds and Draconis was able
to see more than a few feet in front of his face.
Looking north, he could see the distant lights of major cities,
small towns that peppered the main roads and to the west; the Great Wall of
Tarious. The wall towers were lit, as always. It was part of the early warning
system set in place by Tristan decades ago. If under attack, the towers would
dump pitch into their braziers which would create great plumes of thick green
smoke to alert the Kingdom of invasion.
Eighty-Two years had passed since the mystical breach between
Fangoria and Amesdia had been sealed and yet not a day passed that Draconis
didn’t look in its direction. Tristan dismissed his grandfather’s concerns.
Despite the doorway between worlds being breached on two occasions in as many
millennia, he believed them to be wholly unrelated. Draconis didn’t believe in
coincidence, every opening of the doorway solidified the pathway.
It had been a like number of years since any of the citizens of
the Great Expanse had been seen remotely close to the wall. On occasion a
trader would sail into one of the many Kingdom ports to trade goods, but rarely
did they come armed beyond what would be expected of a merchant vessel.
Now, though, the new King of the Seven Kingdoms had publicly
announced his plans to conquer and settle the Great Expanse once and for all.
Andrew, Tristan’s great-grandson, was bold and determined to say the very
least. Despite small skirmishes, the last eighty years had seen the longest
period of peace in the history of Amesdia.
The King was now proposing to send a conquering force to pacify
the region for colonization. The Expanse was largely infested with Orcs,
mercenaries, and wild-men, but he was still proposing genocide. It was possible
that the mercenaries and wild-men could be brought into the Kingdom as annexed
citizens, however, in his experience, Orcs couldn’t be reasoned with.
Perhaps Draconis was getting sentimental in his old age, but
he’d seen his fill of death long before the Dragon Host had ever arrived on
Amesdia. Their former home world had been overrun by half-breeds turned to
madness bent on the wholesale slaughter of the Draconic race. When they’d
arrived in Amesdia, they’d sued for peace with the local warlords who would
eventually carve out the Seven Kingdoms.
Nearly a thousand years ago, the humans had begun to tire of
ceaselessly killing one another and banded together under the Vallious line of
Kings. Each country was an entity unto itself, however, they all swore fealty
to the King of Kings, who was now
Andrew. New to the throne and possibly keen to prove himself the leader his
grandfather (Tristan and Mina’s first son, Jonathan) had been.
While most regarded Draconis as the King of Dragons, he thought
of himself as his own father had; their caretaker. He had made it clear to his
kin that this war was not the responsibility of the Dragon Host to support.
Still, younglings being younglings, many were keen to support
the descendent of Tristan and he had made clear his stance on this war. He was
lending his full support to any action that would end the Orc threat to
Amesdia.
Draconis didn’t blame his grandson for his anger and fear. Of
all of the mortals of this world, Tristan understood more than any other the
threat that Orcs presented both to the Draconic and mortal races. Tristan had
spent the last eighty years building up relationships between humans, dwarves
and elves. Conference upon conference had been held just below this mountain
top, inside of Dragon Hold castle, between all four races to mend wounds.
Elves felt abandoned by Dragons, Dwarves felt betrayed by both,
Humans were suspicious of anyone who didn’t look like them. The entire process
had been long, more than a little contentious, and at times tedious in the
extreme. Still, after years of talk, reconciliation and then education, at
least in the Dragon Hold, all four races had an equal voice.
Ambassadors from all four major races were on hand and formed
part of the Dragon Hold council along with Tristan and Draconis as the senior
members. Over a decade ago, emissaries had been sent north to invite
ambassadors from the giants, trolls, wild-men and others that populated the
Great Expanse. Their efforts were rebuffed, which only served to strengthen the
call to arms for northern invasion.
“Troubled?”
A soft, familiar voice called as she landed behind him.
“Hmm?”
Draconis replied.
“What’s
on your mind, big brother?” Lesariu asked.
Draconis was forced to smile. He, Lesariu and Socolis had been
crèche-mates as younglings and yet the two of them insisted on acting like he
was older than they were.
“Cassandra.
Tristan. This war, ” he began. “Take your pick.”
“Cassie,”
she said with a wry grin.
David has been writing for most of his life, though only began putting
together full-length novels in 2008. His first two novels were
distinctly fantasy, containing the usual fare of dragons, princes,
swords and sorcery.
together full-length novels in 2008. His first two novels were
distinctly fantasy, containing the usual fare of dragons, princes,
swords and sorcery.
With "Daughter of Vengeance", he took leave of the more common
tropes in fantasy and instead wrote a book predominantly from a
female point of view. The story follows a young woman coming of age
while apprenticed to a master assassin.
tropes in fantasy and instead wrote a book predominantly from a
female point of view. The story follows a young woman coming of age
while apprenticed to a master assassin.
His strengths lie in compelling stories with a satisfying mix of action,
dialogue and plot building. He doesn't believe in waxing
philosophical to fill pages or fluff his word count, there will be
not be entire paragraphs dedicated to the painfully long-winded
description of a button. He also uses his extensive martial arts and
marksmanship experience to create believable and easy to follow
action.
dialogue and plot building. He doesn't believe in waxing
philosophical to fill pages or fluff his word count, there will be
not be entire paragraphs dedicated to the painfully long-winded
description of a button. He also uses his extensive martial arts and
marksmanship experience to create believable and easy to follow
action.
Most genre fiction uses the genre to drive the plot, David believes that
the genre should merely be used to supplement a great story. A
mystery is just a mystery, but a Holmes mystery is infinitely more
entertaining in his opinion. There are still inalienable requirements
to any genre fiction and as a fan of the fantasy genre, he still
loves to read and write within fantastical surroundings.
the genre should merely be used to supplement a great story. A
mystery is just a mystery, but a Holmes mystery is infinitely more
entertaining in his opinion. There are still inalienable requirements
to any genre fiction and as a fan of the fantasy genre, he still
loves to read and write within fantastical surroundings.
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1 Comments
Thanks for having me on your blog!
ReplyDeletePlease try not to spam posts with the same comments over and over again. Authors like seeing thoughtful comments about their books, not the same old, "I like the cover" or "sounds good" comments. While that is nice, putting some real thought and effort in is appreciated. Thank you.