Chains of a Dark Goddess

Read Chains of a Dark Goddess Online

Authors: David Alastair Hayden

BOOK: Chains of a Dark Goddess
5.48Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Contents

Blurb

Title Page

Preface

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Chapter 48

Chapter 49

Chapter 50

Chapter 51

Chapter 52

Chapter 53

Chapter 54

Chapter 55

Chapter 56

Chapter 57

Chapter 58

Epilogue

Please Review

Other Books by David Alastair Hayden

Wrath of the White Tigress

Who Walks in Flame

Storm Phase

Acknowledgements

About the Author

Tales of Pawan Kor

Chains of a Dark Goddess

Betrayed by friends and abandoned by his goddess …

Back from the dead and hellbent on saving his beloved.

In life, Knight Champion Breskaro Varenni zealously served the bright goddess Seshalla. He was a hero and a legend, the greatest knight of the age. But his most trusted friends betrayed him to the swords of infidels, and his goddess abandoned him, denying him Paradise.

In death Breskaro refused to fade into Oblivion, like lesser lost souls.

Instead he wandered the Shadowland for seven years until the dark goddess Harmulkot offered him the one thing only she could give, the one thing that still mattered to him... 

A chance to save his precious Orisala from a fate worse than his own.

Returned as a wreck of embalmed flesh animated by sorcery, with a host of the desperate and the undead under his command, Breskaro will do whatever it takes to save Orisala, no matter the odds and no matter the consequences.

David Alastair Hayden returns to the exotic land of Pawan Kor, first seen in
Wrath of the White Tigress
, with this seductive epic of swords and sorcery in the tradition of Brent Weeks, Robin Hobb, Michael Moorcock, and David Gemmell.

Reader Advisory: This book may not suitable for readers of young adult fiction.

Tales of Pawan Kor

The
Tales of Pawan Kor
series can be read in any order.

Chains of a Dark Goddess

Wrath of the White Tigress

Who Walks in Flame

Storm Phase

This enchanting Asian-inspired fantasy series delivers fast-paced adventure for readers young and old.

The Storm Dragon’s Heart

Lair of the Deadly Twelve

Tales of Pawan Kor

Chains of a Dark Goddess

David Alastair Hayden

Published by Typing Cat Press 

at Smashwords

Copyright © 2013 by David Alastair Hayden

All Rights Reserved

Version 1.0  |  January 2013

 

Cover illustration by Leos Ng "Okita"

Graphic Design by Pepper Thorn

WRATH OF THE WHITE TIGRESS Excerpt

Copyright © 2011 by David Alastair Hayden

All Rights Reserved.

Cover illustration by Sandara

WHO WALKS IN FLAME Excerpt

Copyright © 2012 by David Alastair Hayden

All Rights Reserved.

Cover illustration by Pepper Thorn

THE STORM DRAGON’S HEART Excerpt

Copyright © 2012 by David Alastair Hayden

All Rights Reserved.

Cover illustration by Leos Ng “Okita”

“The evil that men do lives after them; The good is oft interred with their bones.”

— William Shakespeare,
Julius Caesar

Chapter 1

The desolate ravine lay deathly quiet in the perpetual twilight of the mist-draped Shadowland, seemingly empty of the demons that preyed on the lost souls trapped there. A man shambled into the gorge. Listless eddies of dust trailed his feet. Head drooping and shoulders hunched, he moved like a sleepwalker, unaware of his surroundings. Once-fine armor hung on his tall frame limply — its bright shine lost to the teeth and claws of countless demons. The sword he drug carelessly behind him bore the nicks and scars of many pointless battles.

A scaly shadow slithered into place behind a basalt outcrop. It flexed razor talons and flicked a ropy tongue over its rows of jagged teeth. With a hopeful spark dancing in its giant black eyes, it pounced — swift, silent, unseen...

Expected.

The man raised his battered shield a heartbeat before the demon landed on top of him. He twisted and deflected the blow, tossing the startled fiend onto the rocks. It scrambled to get back up. It was too slow. With a swift lunge and one smooth motion, the man sliced his blade through the creature’s corded neck. 

The demon faded into Oblivion.

The man’s clouded eyes cleared as they stared at the spot where the demon had been. He could do that ... let go ... fade into Oblivion. 

No. He shook his head, trying to remember. He was waiting. He had been promised something. He had been promised ... Paradise. 

Sighing, he scanned the charred, mist-draped landscape. His eyes turned ashen and cold again like the dead sky above. His body lost its fighting stance and he wandered deeper into the ravine.

Hours, maybe days, passed. Time had no meaning in the Shadowland, not to him, not to anyone trapped there. A terrified scream shattered the silence. The man ambled forward without urgency. He rounded a bend and spotted the attack. 

A young woman cowered at the back of a shallow crevice. She would have been beautiful in life. Now she was as washed out and grey as everything else here. Only her fear tied her to what she had once been.

A demon with the body of a huge, decaying leper and the head of a wasp loomed over her. By the patterns left in the settling dust he could tell it had herded her there, playing with its prey. 

He charged. The monster was so intent on its victim that it didn’t even notice him coming. But she did, and her eyes filled with hope. That the fiend did notice. It turned to face the man just in time for him to sink his blade deep into its chest. The demon pawed uselessly at the hilt as it faded.

The woman scrambled to her feet and threw herself into his arms with a sob. “Oh, thank you. Thank you. It was so awful. You saved me. Thank you, thank—”

Her hysterical muttering ended with a surprised gasp as his sword slid into her side.

“This is better,” he said in a distant, monotone voice. “You don’t belong here.”

She jerked free and staggered back a step before slumping to the ground and fading away. 

He rubbed at the dull ache in his chest and sat on a nearby boulder. The young woman reminded him of something ... someone. A terrible, nightmarish reminder. His eyes glazed back over, and the pain faded. He stood and started down the ravine.

“Breskaro Varenni!”

He spun, his sword already poised to strike. A woman unlike any other stood several paces away. She smiled at his slow-witted surprise. Even here, in this impossible place beyond death, he had never seen anything like her. She reached one hand towards him and took a swaggering step closer, her anklets of bone clicking. Silver winged-snake tattoos slithered against the unnatural jet-black of her skin, seeming to dance up her arms in a starless night. Her amber eyes trapped his and looked through them into all he had ever been. The alizarin-orange gem embedded in her forehead, her qavra stone, flickered as if filled with torchlight.

Mesmerized by her, he didn’t even react as she walked right up to him and touched him between the eyes. 

“Awake, champion, your services are needed.”

He stumbled back and shook his head. All the gray numbness and mental exhaustion slipped off him. His eyes cleared. He sheathed his blade and ran his hands over his battered breastplate, until he reached the deep hole over his heart. Not all these scars and punctures were the work of demons. 

His jaw clenched and his eyes narrowed as he remembered — infidels looming over his broken body, their bloody swords flashing in the sun ... pain ... death ... then this. 

“I remember. How — how long have I...” He gestured weakly at the dead land around him.

“Seven years.”

“I have wandered this — this hell for
seven years
? Why?!”

Her voice was sibilant, seductive. “Those who do not pass into either Paradise or Torment roam the Shadowland until they fade into Oblivion. Most last no more than a few weeks, if they do not fall to demons first.” He nodded as the knowledge came back to him. “But not you, Breskaro. You are not done with life.”

He fingered the rose-stamped Eternal Sun medallion still attached to his remaining shoulder guard. A symbol of Seshalla, goddess of love and wisdom. His Goddess. He had been her Knight Champion. He had died crusading for her. But she had refused him Paradise. Even the lowliest recruit steeped in a lifetime of sin earned Paradise if they perished fighting for her. She should have given
him
a drink from the Cup of Eternity with her own hand as the Matriarch had promised.

“I dedicated my whole life to Seshalla. I died in
her
name and this —
this
is how she honors me?” Throwing back his head, he clenched his hands into fists and roared. “
Seshalla
!” 

He crumpled to the ground. “Why?” The plea was soft but his voice quickly hardened with slow, cold hatred. “How could you abandon me?”

“She cannot hear you.” The exotic woman gave another secretive smile when he glared up at her. “Perhaps Seshalla abandoned you, and perhaps she did not. Wiser men than you have placed their faith in lies.”

“Who are you, witch, and what do you want with me?”

Her smile only deepened as she touched the telltale qavra. “I am Nalsyrra, of the Ojaka’ari. I have come to take you back.”

“Back? Back to the land of the living? Why? How?”

“I represent a goddess, one who still has power. Though not enough to save her people. For that she needs you. As to how, I can lead you to the Keeper of Death who guards the Way of Return. But you must face him and defeat him alone.”

Breskaro laughed bitterly and climbed to his feet. “I am done serving fickle goddesses, Nalsyrra of the Ojaka’ari. I have learned my lesson through pain. Tell her to choose another warrior to fight her battles.”

“If all she needed were a warrior, do you think we would have gone to the trouble to raise you from the dead? You were the Knight Champion of Seshalla and the commander of the legendary Valiants. You were a mighty warrior, a brilliant tactician, and an inspiration to every man in Issalia’s army. You struck fear into the hearts of your enemies. You survived impossible quests. You are the one we need.”

Other books

The Andalucian Friend by Alexander Söderberg
A Banbury Tale by Maggie MacKeever
Collaboration by Michelle Lynn, Nevaeh Lee
House Of Secrets by Tracie Peterson