Audible version of Shadowland - Coming Soon!
Not only has Shadowland just received its 185th review on Amazon, which is a huge achievement, but later this year you will be able to download the audible version of the book.I'm so excited to be working with Ioan Hefin, the wonderful Welsh actor who is giving his incredible voice to Usher Vance, as soon as I have something I will post it here! I cannot tell you how thrilling it is to hear Shadowland read by Ioan, I couldn't have asked for a better reader, his voice is perfect, and I'm sure you will agree.
Also, I am still writing the sequel to Shadowland. As with most of my writing it is taking its time but the story is really coming together. I am now nine chapters into it and certain things are really beginning to 'click.' Normally I write without any clear plan of the story that is opening up before me, but with this book, which I'm calling, 'The Shadow of a King' I do actually have two ancient legends that tell of Uther and it will be these two legends that form the root of my tale. I am putting the 'first draft' prologue below to wet your appetite. Do bear in mind it has not been properly edited and will no doubt go through a few changes before it makes it into the book, but here is the prologue to The Shadow of a King....
The Shadow of a King - Prologue
‘No… please, do not move him… The King
is not to be moved… I beg of you.’ The nun stepped in front of the advancing warrior
and pushed her hands against his chest, hindering his passage further into the
dimly lit cell. ‘There must be some mistake… the King is gravely ill.’ She was
flustered, almost beside herself in her wish to turn these intruders around and
see them gone. ‘The Abbess is not here, she sleeps now, but she left instructions
that he cannot be disturbed... you may kill him.’
The warrior looked down at the small figure blocking his path. Her
dress, as with all of these nuns was a covering from head to foot of coarse
black wool. This one was gazing up from beneath her cowl with a look of abject
horror at his intrusion, while her pale white hands fluttered ineffectually against
his stained and dented breastplate, then she glanced towards her charge, the lone
figure that lay upon the cot within the damp, dark cell. Beside the cot, a
single stub of candle, set upon a small table, lit a thick torc of twisted
gold; the dull metal gleamed in the candlelight - the candle guttered in the
invasive draft sending shadows dancing along the rough, stone walls.
‘Spirits preserve us, what a piss hole,’ the warrior whispered under his
breath. Rats were moving close by, he could hear them, squeaking and rustling
amongst the floor rushes in the darkness; the whole place reeked of vermin. This
was a god-awful place, even if it was an Abbey. The whole place was rank with
the smell of rat piss, burning herbs and rotting flesh, but it was still an
improvement on the gathering of tribes he had so recently left. The Abbey was
at least warm and out of the incessant drizzling rain. The warrior raised a
hand and rubbed absently at the knot of wires, shaped into the form of an
intricate cross that hung at his throat between the ends of his own, somewhat thinner,
gold torc. The cross was not a Christian emblem, but something far older – a
connection to the ancient spirits of the land, for like many of his ilk, the
warrior was still a follower of the old ways and hadn’t yet been won over by the
honeyed words or their threats of damnation. Touching the cross had been an
unconscious reflex to ward off the evil that he felt dwelt within the Abbey. He
had not wanted to come here this night, but then fool’s errand or not, he would
do the druids work and so be it.
With a sigh he removed his helm and brushed his fingers back through
long, greying hair that was thinning badly as the gesture rudely reminded him.
He was tired, felt weary to the bone, his arms heavy from a clash with a Saxons
raiding party during the dark hours of their riding to the Abbey.
The two groups had met upon the wooded road, both groups startled to
come upon the other, neither group wishing to tarry. After a brief period of
both parties shouting and taunting each other, each attempting to force the
other to turn and run, they had fought - which of course had been inevitable. The
clash had been brief and violent, but on this particular occasion they had not
taken any losses and sustained only one small wound to a member of their party.
The Saxons, once past the Britons and heavy with raided goods, had fled towards
their own border - it wasn’t deemed prudent to pursue them considering the task
the druid had tasked them with.
Drawing a deep breath, the warrior calmed himself. ‘My name is Sir
Ector, and I’m sorry lady, I really am, but there is no mistake. My orders were
spoken by the lips of the Druid Merlyn himself; our King must rise.’ Turning,
he threw his helm back into the hands of one of his men and gently brushing the
sobbing nun to the side, approached the low sleeping pallet.
As he dropped to one knee beside his King,
his two companions entered fully into the cell, bringing with them dampness and
the sharp smell of the rainy dawn that had settled on their mail and plate armour.
‘Your
Highness… ’ In the inadequate light from the flickering candle, Uther Pendragon,
High King of the Britons, appeared for all the world as if he may already be
dead. Sir Ector studied the dying man and felt the small light of hope that he
had been desperately holding onto, begin to dim; this surely could not be a man
who within days would be leading an army into battle. It would be some kind of
Christian miracle if the King ever rose from this pallet ever again, unless it
was to be taken to his funeral pyre.
‘Your Highness… ’ Sir Ector studied his king for some sign of life, some
indication that he was hearing him. Yet the King’s skin was white and mottled,
hanging upon his bones as if it were made up of gossamer layers of autumn
leaves, dry and yellow in the candlelight. The closed eyes of Uther Pendragon, eyes
that were once so fierce and full of pride, were sunken back into their sockets,
seemingly lost within the shadows of his soul.
‘Uther, can you hear me, or is it that you already walk the shadowland.’
The room was silent as all within watched anxiously for something… Reaching out,
the leather and metal of his armour creaking, Sir Ector placed the back of his
hand close to Uther’s mouth, holding it still for a few moments as he felt for
breath. As he moved his hand up to the King’s brow, the eyes fluttered open and
Sir Ector drew back sharply.
‘Forgive me Highness. I would not have disturbed you, but… ’
The eyes blinked several times as the King returned from wherever it was
that his Soul had travelled, possibly to the gates to the shadowland itself?
Turning his head, he cast about the shadows and finally found the features of
the kneeling knight. ‘Ector?’ The voice was weak, brittle, yet more than just
the whisper Sir Ector had been hoping for – Uther Pendragon still lived.
‘Highness, forgive me… but the Druid has summoned you to the
battlefield. He tells that the spirits have spoken to him and it is time for
you to lead us once more.’ Sir Ector turned and gestured. One of his men stepped
forward, and together they went about the task of raising the king to his feet.
It was a shock to find that Uther Pendragon weighed no more than a
child. The King was pulled upright to hang limply between the two knights. His
head lolling down against his chest, dirty white tunic coming to above bony
knees and heavy woollen leg wraps falling untucked about his ankles. Sir Ector
began to wonder anew if this pitiful remains were just some hollow shell, an
empty husk of the man who had once united the tribes of Britain, his former
King and friend. Had he witnessed life in the dying body, or had the King’s
soul merely turned back one last time before finally moving on? Despair returned
to fill him once again, a fear that both the spirits, and the old druid might
be wrong.
Dressing him quickly in warming clothing, finishing with a heavy cloak,
they shuffled out of the cell with the nuns shrieking protests following them into
the rush strewn corridor, more nuns came, drawn by the noises and it
immediately became more difficult to manoeuvre with their charge.
The Abbey, built as a fortified home by a former baron, was a narrow,
dark labyrinth of halls, rooms and passageways. It was old, in a state of
advanced neglect and it was damp, the thatch of the roof green and black with
mould and mildew, the rooms and passages teeming with mice and rats. The
mixture of smells becoming stronger as they pushed through the nuns and moved
through the confines in search of the main passage.
The Abby had been gifted to the nuns by Uther when its former owner had
lost both favour, and then his life, in the King’s court. Despite the
spluttering candles that the warriors held, sending a confusion of shadows
ahead of them, it was not easy make their way back to where they had left their
horses.
It was Sir Ector who led them, still pushing aside nuns who wept and
implored him to take the king back to his rest. They sought to bar his way and
confuse his direction, but he pushed on. And so, after much confusion and no
little time, it was he who was first to emerge into the damp, but thankfully,
sweeter chill air of the new morning.
Towards the east, he could see that the dawn sky was growing lighter low
on the horizon, and it was just beginning to chase away the clinging darkness within
the small enclosed square of the Abbey where they had left their horses.
He stopped, the rain pattering against his armour. Lit by the light of
flickering torches that spluttered in the drizzling rain, twenty or so nuns,
sheltered beneath the eves to the sides of the courtyard. However it wasn’t the
nuns that had caught his attention and stopped him, it was the tall figure dressed
in black who stood alone in the middle of the open area, hood raised against
the rain. As soon as they had emerged carrying the slumped body of Uther, the figure
had raised its arms to bar their way. Somewhat startled, Sir Ector held up his candle
aware of others coming out of the Abbey behind him. He was relieved to see the
figure was no spirit, but as evidenced by the slim, white wrists, that it was a
woman; almost certainly the Abbess herself.
‘What madness do you bring to our Lord’s house?’ She hissed. ‘The King
is dying. Does he not warrant your respect in these, his final days? Has he not
done enough for his people that you must steal him away in the dark of the
night? In the name of our Lord God, I tell you that he cannot be taken, he is
the King. You will return him to his rest and leave him here to pass in peace.’
The Abbess stood unwavering, defying the heavily armoured group of warriors
to pass with their burden. Behind her, the warrior’s horses skittered and moved
nervously, alarmed at the sudden raised voice and flickering torches. Eyes wide
and staring, their warm breath clouded in the chill air, they continued to
shuffle, the sound of their hooves clattering upon the stone cobbles echoing
strangely about the enclosed place; which only brought them more distress. They
were big horses, bred for battle in open fields, not confined spaces such as
the Abbey’s courtyard and they were unusually anxious. The warrior holding their
reigns in both hands, whispered soft promises and affections to them, pressing
his face into the muzzle of the biggest, a mottled roan as he tried to reassure
them. The roan tapped the ground with its hoof and snorted, but his efforts seemed
to calm them.
The Abbes was a tall woman and, as her position dictated, she was
accustomed to being obeyed, yet after a moment’s hesitation, whatever spell she
had woven broke and Sir Ector and his men pushed past ignoring her and headed
towards their mounts. The Abbess watched, her arms slowly returning to her
sides as the King was hoisted unceremoniously up upon the back of one of the
horses. He swayed in the saddle, yet somehow managed to keep his seat as his
feet were thrust into the stirrups and then lashed into place. His eyes were
closed as the warriors moved around him. As he began to slump forward, Sir
Ector and a knight quickly moved in to pull him back upright and then held him
while an oak plank was set against his back and a length of flax linen wrapped
tightly around both the King and the board, securing him erect and in place.
The Abbes walked forward, dropping the hood of her cloak as she did so, and
placed a hand upon the King’s leg in a strangely familiar gesture. Reaching up,
she thrust an object into his hands, just as they were being tied to the pommel
of the saddle. She felt him grip the object as the rough hemp of the rope dug
into the flesh of his thin wrists.
‘Go with God, Uther Pendragon, and I pray that the spirits may also be
with you through this day. It seems your tasks among us may never be complete...
I fear your people ask too much of you.’ With a hand covering her mouth to
stifle a sob, the Abbess stepped back into the company of weeping nuns.
Armour was attached to the king; grieves for his legs and a breastplate
to cover his chest. Over this was set a heavy wool cloak, tied in place to
protect him from the rain, but also to cover the ropes that held the King in
place. The knights all mounted and in a final gesture, Sir Ector produced a
golden crown from a bag set behind his saddle, and tugged it firmly into place upon
his King’s lolling head. Preparations complete, the Knight finally looked
across to the Abbess.
‘I am truly sorry Morgana, but you know this is Merlyn’s doing, and not
mine. I would let him die with dignity, here with you, but Merlyn says that he
has communed with the spirits and they have called for the King to lead us in
battle one final time – you know I cannot argue with either the spirits or the
druid.’ Without waiting for a reply, he kicked his horse into motion and the
five mounted men clattered out into a cold grey dawn, the sound of their departure
disturbing a host of crows into flight, the birds rising like winged smoke from
an old, dead elm to circle raucously above them.
The Abbess walked to the gateway
and watched the riders go, four men moving at a trot, whilst the fifth bounced
from side to side, appearing stiff and ungainly as they rounded the hill and
past the muddy track that led up to holy Avalon.
‘Close the gates.’ She waved impatiently and two nuns rushed to do her
bidding, dragging the large, heavy gates closed with an echoing boom, shutting
out the world of man.
One of the nuns stepped forward. ‘Mother, we must pray for the King. Our
Lord God shall cast his light of protection over… ’ The Abbess held up a hand
as the rest of the nuns gathered around her expectantly.
‘Sisters, you must indeed pray for our King, assemble in the chapel. However,
I shall make my own preparations and then retire to my chambers and pray
alone.’ She clapped her hands, and the nuns moved off into the dark Abbey,
while the Abbess headed towards a separate doorway, intent upon devotions of
her own.
To be continued...
I'm looking forward to the audiobook. Ioan is a wonderful person and terrific narrator. He made Corvus, my last novel, come alive in ways I could never have anticipated and for which I'm immensely grateful. And now that you and I have something in common, I'm going to be keeping up with your work!
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