Knightmare Arcanist by Shami Stovall - Book Tour + Giveaway
Date Published: June 18th 2019
Publisher: Capital Station Books
Magic. Sailing. A murderer among heroes.
Gravedigger Volke Savan wants nothing more than to be like his hero, the legendary magical swashbuckler, Gregory Ruma. First he needs to become an arcanist, someone capable of wielding magic, which requires bonding with a mythical creature. And he’ll take anything—a pegasus, a griffin, a ravenous hydra—maybe even a leviathan, like Ruma.
So when Volke stumbles across a knightmare, a creature made of shadow and terror, he has no reservations. But the knightmare knows a terrible secret: Ruma is a murderer out to spread corrupted magic throughout their island nation. He’s already killed a population of phoenixes and he intends to kill even more.
In order to protect his home, his adopted sister, and the girl he admires from afar, Volke will need to confront his hero, the Master Arcanist Gregory Ruma.
A fast-paced flintlock fantasy for those who enjoy How to Train Your Dragon by Cressida Cowell, Unsouled (Cradle Series) by Will Wight, and Percy Jackson and the Olympians by Rick Riordan.
Excerpt
Excerpt
I
outlined a fresh grave for the cemetery as bells rang from the isle’s tower,
signifying the start of the celebrations. The soil reeked of ammonia and rot,
but the crisp morning breeze washed the scent away, dispersing it over the
ocean. I removed my shirt, allowing the wind to cool me while I worked.
Every ten years, the people on the
Isle of Ruma gathered to watch the fledgling phoenixes bond with a few chosen
mortals. Lamplighters did their duty despite the glorious sunshine, each lamp’s
fire representing the flames of phoenixes. Merchants cleared their horses and
carts from the main road in anticipation of the crowds.
This
was my second Day of Phoenixes. A decade ago, on my fifth birthday, I missed
the bonding ceremony to attend my father’s trial. He was convicted of murder,
but because he hadn’t been born on the island, he was taken to the mainland for
final judgement. That was the last time I saw him.
Although the last Day of Phoenixes
had been inauspicious, I intended to change that. Once I had finished digging a
shallow grave, I would make my way into town.
I
slammed the shovel’s head into the dirt and scooped deep. The cemetery sat near
the edge of the island, far from those gathering to observe the hopeful
students trying to win the favor of the phoenixes.
Tradition stated that anyone who
handled sewage, waste, and dead bodies wasn’t allowed to attend the bonding
ceremony, which was just my luck. After my father was sent away, I could’ve
been given to any profession for apprenticeship. I could’ve gone to the
carpenter and learned the craft of woodworking, or I could’ve gone to the
silversmith and learned the art of fine metal work, but misfortune hounded me
like a shadow. I was given to the gravekeeper, slated to dig corpse-holes until
the end of time, forever exiled from the festivities.
I still intended to go. Even if it
meant ignoring the traditions of the isle—something unheard of on our tiny spit
of land—no one could stop me from proving myself to a phoenix. No one.
I
scooped another mound of dirt and tossed it to the side.
“You look deep in thought, Volke,”
my fellow corpse-hole apprentice, Illia, said. “What’re you planning?”
“I’m waiting for the trials to
begin.”
“And then what?”
“You’ll see.”
Illia sat in the shade of a cypress
tree, her legs crossed and her chin in both hands. Most people hated the
thought of sitting on graves, since it was supposed to bring bad luck, but
Illia wasn’t like most people. She leaned back on a headstone and exhaled as
the ocean wind rushed by, catching her wavy brown hair and revealing the scars
on the side of her face.
She held a hand over the marks, like
she always did. The moment the wind died down, she pulled some of her hair
around to cover her scars, hiding the old knife wounds that had taken her right
eye.
I finished one half of the grave and
huffed.
Illia and I lived in a tiny cottage
on the edge of the cemetery, apprenticed to Ruma’s sole gravekeeper. We both
held the glorious title of gravedigger.
Like me, she had no family. Well, we had each other, and Gravekeeper William,
but he hardly counted.
For ten years, Illia and I had
considered ourselves brother and sister, and siblings always know each other’s
mood. Illia displayed all the telltale signs of irritation—narrowed eye, rarely
blinking, her mouth turned down in a slight frown. She hated the fact I was
keeping secrets from her. If I didn’t explain myself quick, she’d exact her
revenge.
“I don’t want to become the next
gravekeeper,” I said as I threw a mound of dirt off to the side.
With an eyebrow sarcastically
raised, Illia asked, “So you’re going to impress a phoenix and leave this
place, is that it?”
“That’s right.”
“Only two phoenixes were born this
year,” she said, wagging her finger. “And the schoolmaster has already picked
his two favored disciples to win the right to bond. No one wants you to take a
phoenix from either of those try-hards.”
“I don’t care.” I scooped out
another clump of dirt, my grip on the shovel so tight it hurt. “Bonding with a
phoenix is too important. Besides, no one on this isle likes me anyway. Why
should I start caring about their opinions now?”
About the Author
Shami Stovall relies on her BA in History and Juris Doctorate to make her living as an author and history professor in the central valley of California. She writes in a wide range of fiction, from crime thrillers to fantasy to science-fiction. Stovall loves reading, playing video games, entertaining others with stories, and writing about herself in the third person.
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