Monday, December 9, 2019

The Runaway - Part Four



Hey, digressors! I bet you'd almost forgotten this blog existed, hm? Sorry about that. Between my usual difficulties focusing on things, the ongoing battle with Lyme (in which I've made some progress), and the struggle to rewrite 'The Survivor' (the new version is with beta readers right now -- I'll post an update when I have a better idea of how much more needs to be done), the blog kind of fell through the cracks. 

This past year has been especially difficult because my mom was diagnosed with stage four breast cancer on October 30th, 2018, and lost her battle with it on October 2nd of this year (2019). She was an amazing woman and my biggest fan in all things, and although it's painful to think of writing and publishing new things without being able to show them to her, I know it's what she would want. 

Something else I know is that Part Four of 'The Runaway' (a prequel story to 'The Follower', focusing on how Jorthen Lavahr and Sohrem Terahl met and became friends) has been sitting half-written on my hard drive since 2016. I've finally finished it, and if y'all don't mind, I'd like to continue publishing it here. Eventually I might pull all my Sehret backstory pieces together and publish an anthology on Kindle, but I'm not there yet, so for now, the story will be free-to-read. Since it's been a long time since the previous parts of the story went live, here are the links for your convenience: 






And now, without further ado, here's... 


The Runaway
Part Four


Reshan Guard Military Base, Jaern – Reshan Territory

Eight years ago

It had been almost a month since Atrin had rushed Jorthen through registration and deposited him into his shared quarters with five other recruits — all new, and all at least two or three years older than him, just like everyone else who lived, learned, and worked there. It was supposed to be a training facility for people to learn how to fight so they could protect their country should it ever face war, but more likely they would all be assigned guard posts either around Jaern or in their hometowns and never see a clash more intense than a barroom brawl.

As most soldiers over twenty-five had either been promoted to officer status or been assigned to posts elsewhere, the majority of those walking the halls were in their late teens or early twenties and acted every bit the adolescents they were. Thus, the base felt more like a glorified school which happened to include combat training in its curriculum.

He’d always wondered what it would be like to go to an actual school, with a crowd to get lost in so no-one would bother to look at him, make him work through problems aloud, or recite difficult-to-pronounce texts. Now he wished he could go back to learning from a tutor at home, where the drama and immaturity of those who by all rights should have been more mature than him made every day a nightmare.

Not that his days would have been particularly dreamlike otherwise.

More than anything, he wished Amra were there so he could tell her about it. He’d written letters, six of them already, but knew deep down that they probably wouldn’t reach her. Atrin had never been pleased with how much time Jorthen spent with Amra, and although Mother had always been sympathetic and pulled strings to give them opportunities to interact, Atrin made it his life’s goal to do the opposite. Jorthen wouldn’t be surprised to learn that the whole reason he’d been shipped off to the Guard so young was because Atrin feared it would be harder to keep them apart as they approached adulthood. Mother would never have allowed this.

But Mother was dead, so there was no use thinking about it.

The rest of the recruits bustled and chattered around the cafeteria, gathering food and swooping into seats beside their friends to whisper about their instructors and groan about how sore they were from training. Jorthen sat alone at a corner table and observed them all in silence. The food here was lackluster, but at least it filled his stomach. The girls at the table to his left, however, seemed less content with it. Ahead of him was a cluster of boys who huddled together and spoke in what they thought were hushed tones, but not hushed enough to keep their words from drifting to his ears a few yards away. He filtered them out for the most part, until he heard his own name enter the conversation.

“Can you believe they let in that scrawny little waif? What is this, a nursery?”

“Please,” another boy countered. “You know the Lavahrs are richer than half the council combined. Councilman Lavahr probably bribed them with a castle or something.”

Jorthen’s throat and the hand holding his fork both tightened as he kept his gaze trained on the meal he’d barely touched. It was just talk. Talk was stupid. There was no point getting worked up over it.

The fair-weather heart stuttering in his chest had a different opinion.

“Well, he’ll either be kicked out or drop dead soon enough. Haven't you heard him gasp when he spars?”

A boy laughed. “He’s a regular little wheezer.”

“We should call him that!”

“Oh, perfect. Hey, Wheezer!”

Jorthen's shoulders bunched as the boy hollered at him. Just talk. Just names. It wasn't a big deal.

A chorus of mouths shushed the boy and hissed at him to keep his voice down.

“Why? It's not like he'll do anything. He’s a milksop.”

“He’ll tell his father,” one of the others said a little too loudly. “And how much fun d'you think you'll have on a founding family's bad side?”

“Private Lavahr!”

A grown man’s voice from the cafeteria’s entryway made Jorthen jump. He fought to keep his breathing under control as he nudged his plate away from him and rose to face the doorway. “Y-yes, s-s-sir?”

Muffled snickers and exaggeratedly repetitive hissing sounds came from the bullies’ table.

One of the officers whose names Jorthen hadn’t learned yet stood in the doorway and beckoned with a twitch of his head. “Report to the infirmary. Now.”

Oh, no. He didn’t know which was worse — the fact that the officer had announced the summons so publicly, or that it had been given in the first place. Jorthen fought a cringe and muttered, “Yessir.”

“What was that, Lavahr?”

Anxiety twinged his stomach. He raised his voice. “I… said…yes, s-sir.”

The officer glared as if Jorthen’s slowed speech were an attempt at sassing him, but said nothing. Jorthen started for the door, realized his food was still on the table, and turned back to deal with it. Every step drew another eye to him, and he felt like passing out by the time he finally reached the entryway and headed down the hall.

“Other way, Lavahr,” the officer said, exaggerating Jorthen’s surname as he spoke it. “That way’s the women’s quarters.”

Jorthen’s cheeks burned as he turned and headed the other way.

At least the hall to the infirmary was quiet at the moment. Everyone was either training or eating, except for him and a few unfortunate souls assigned to watch the various doors and make sure no-one slipped in or out without approval. He wished they’d take a break, but as he knew that wasn’t happening, he forced himself to approach the infirmary door and knock.

“Come in.”

He drew a shuddering breath and entered. Geram Kellyn’s stooped back and greying hair greeted him. Geram turned briefly and gestured for Jorthen to take a seat on the examination table before he resumed crushing herbs at his workstation. “Didn’t see you for your checkup yesterday.”

Jorthen sat where he was told and fought not to squirm. He swallowed and waited until he felt he had some control over his tongue before answering, “Sorry.”

Geram sighed heavily and left his mortar and pestle to approach Jorthen. “You’ve naught to fear from me, boy. Not unless you’ve done somethin’ wrong. Have you?”

“…No, sir.”

Geram grunted. “Thought not. So stop your shaking — you’re safe here.”

Talking became a little easier as Jorthen’s heartrate slowed. “Thank you, sir,” he said quietly.

Another grunt, and Geram returned to his workstation to stir the newly crushed ingredients into a cup of water before extending the mixture to his patient. “Drink this.”

Jorthen grimaced and pinched his nose as he obeyed. The grainy texture of the herbs swept over his tongue and down his throat. The feeling was familiar, but the taste seemed fouler than usual. He returned the cup to Geram and kept hold of his nose for a few seconds before releasing. When he did, the residual flavor of the drink left his expression pinched. “What’s that?”

“It’s your daily medicine,” Geram said. “But a double dose — it’s what you’ll be taking for the next couple weeks.”

“Why?”

“Because you’ve not taken it as prescribed.”

Jorthen cringed. “N-no, I… I’ve been taking it.”

Geram’s lined brown eyes met his. “Have you really?”

He only lasted a few seconds under Geram’s scrutiny before his gaze dropped and he mumbled, “No, s-sir.”

“And why not?”

He swallowed hard and lifted a shoulder, unable to come up with a good answer.

Another sigh whistled from Geram’s nose, and he let the question go. “Take off your shirt.”

Jorthen stiffened and shook his head. Before Geram could insist, he muttered in a rush, “Too cold. Think I’ve got a fever or s-something.”

“You don’t have a fever,” Geram said sternly, “any more’n you did the last time I asked. You’ve got a habit of lying to physicians, boy — mind explaining why?”

The accusation changed his tangled tongue to stone, and he said nothing.

“Look now, lad,” Geram murmured. “I’ve been ‘round long enough to know a few things, and to learn how to keep a secret. I need to know what ails you if I’m to look after your wellbeing. And for that… I need you to remove your shirt.”

“I can’t,” Jorthen whispered, afraid he’d stutter if he tried for more than those two syllables. Why did Geram care, anyway? Physicians never cared. They just did what they were told, and kept telling him the same things he’d been hearing since infancy.

“Boy,” Geram said, tapping Jorthen’s knee with the back of his hand. “Nothing you say here leaves this room. On my life, you can trust me.”

Jorthen’s heart thudded painfully, and he fought the urge to look over his shoulder to see if his father had stepped through the wall to stare at the back of his head. It felt like he was right there. Jorthen’s chest hurt, his hands grew numb and cold, and his throat tightened.

Another tap came at his knee. “Private Lavahr?”

Jorthen swallowed hard as the fatherly tone in Geram’s voice brought tears to his eyes. He took as deep a breath as he could manage, closed his eyes for a moment, then nodded and pulled off his shirt.

———————

Geram fumed silently as he finished examining his youngest patient and sent him back to his quarters with a fresh prescription. It had taken all his willpower not to scream at the poor lad as he questioned him, with the true object of his rage nowhere in sight.

Now he sought the offender out, leaving his post to find Councilman Lavahr’s private quarters and rap sharply on the door.

Watch your mouth, Kellyn, he told himself. No good’ll be accomplished by you getting fired.

When no-one answered the door immediately, Geram banged harder on the portal and called gruffly, “Lavahr, it’s Geram Kellyn — open up.”

At last the mahogany door swung open to reveal Atrin Lavahr’s vaguely exasperated expression. “Should I expect my door to be broken down regularly, or are you here to hand in your resignation?”

It was all Geram could do not to break the man’s face. “You’ll want to invite me inside.”

“And why might I want that?”

“’Cause you don’t want me announcing the results of your boy’s latest physical to the whole base.”

Atrin gripped the doorframe and worked his jaw before taking a step backwards. “Please come in.”

Geram obeyed and waited for the door to close before snapping, “If ever a boy turned out more like his father—”

Atrin barked out a laugh. “You think Jorthen takes after me?”

“I mean you and Theran,” Geram said darkly.

Atrin’s eyes flashed as he sat on the edge of his desk. “Are you accusing me of something, physician?”

“If I thought it’d make any difference, I would, but we both know it wouldn’t.”

Atrin crossed his arms, relaxing smugly. “Then may I ask the purpose of this social call?”

“You’re on track to kill him, Lavahr.”

“My father didn’t kill me.”

Geram’s fists clenched at his sides. “Well, the lad’s not you, and bless him and his mother for that.”

“You imply none of his positive traits are the result of my efforts.”

“He might have a shot at growing into something decent,” Geram said through gritted teeth. “But if you keep up the Lavahr ways with him, he’ll never get the chance. Is that why you brought him here? To finish him off?”

This time Atrin rolled his eyes, and straightened to pour himself a glass of wine from an ornate pitcher on his desk. “I’ve done nothing to or with him that wasn’t for his own good.”

“I doubt that,” Geram growled, but again had to admit to himself his own powerlessness. To challenge a Lavahr was to risk one’s own ruin. He advanced slowly, trying to picture a battered nineteen-year-old before him rather than an indifferent thirty-something. “I’m not simple enough to think we’re friends. I’d not want to be yours after this.”

“Then it’s lucky for you I lost interest in such a friendship fifteen years ago.”

“But I’ll not stand by and do nothing as you force a child into an earlier grave than he’s already destined for. I know if I toss him out of the ranks, you’ll push him back in. Maybe he’s even better off here.”

“His siblings are certainly better off.” Atrin sipped from his glass. “His lack of discipline will trickle down to them if I’m not careful.”

Heat flashed through Geram. Careful, he reminded himself. “So if he’s to stay here, then I’m keeping an eye on him. He’ll keep coming in for regular check-ups and take whatever treatment I prescribe.”

“Isn’t that your job?”

“I’ll also take a detailed account of any and all changes in his condition. Illnesses, cuts, scrapes… bruises.”

Atrin’s grip on his cup tightened as his eyes locked back onto Geram. “What has he told you?”

“Nothing,” Geram answered truthfully. “Thanks to you, he could barely look me in the eye without trembling. But I’m a physician. I know the marks of a beating when I see them.”

Atrin worked his jaw and carefully set his glass back onto his desk. “What do you want? Money? A favor?”

“I want you to leave him be. He’s under my care, and founding family or not, if I find more bruises on him, I will file a report.”

“You’ll be replaced.”

“Maybe. But at least the lad would know there’s someone who cared enough to stand up for him. You should know well how much difference that could make. And you should also recall I don’t make empty threats.”

Boots scraped as Atrin pushed away from the desk and advanced to tower over Geram, eyes narrowed, knuckles white. Geram held his stare, long past being intimidated by any of the Lavahrs. While he knew the power they held and knew to tread lightly around it, he also knew that sometimes even the thinnest ice was worth stomping through.

“It’s only for the sake of our history that I’m relenting, physician. And it’s a one-time deal. If you challenge me again, I'll have your job. And I’ll continue to discipline my son as I see fit.”

“No more bruises.”

“No more,” Atrin agreed. “Not that I’ll admit to causing them in the first place.”

Geram sniffed and wagged his head as he went to the door. “As I said. If ever a boy turned out more like his father…”

As soon as he shut the door behind him, he felt the impact as glass struck and shattered against it. Geram slammed his fist against the wood in retaliation, then returned to his post, muttering pointlessly violent words the whole way.

———————


Present day



"So let me see if I understand this." Boots clomped heavily at Jorthen's right, scraping as they reached one end of the room and reversed course. "An undocumented Shamindo rode in on a stolen horse yesterday, and you were the first to discover him."

"Yes, sir," Jorthen said without looking up. He scrawled his signature on the first page before him and flipped it over to skim the next few paragraphs for the next line and any pertinent information preceding it. He made a show of locking his eyes onto the paper, not daring to let them stray or let himself lean back an inch. Any deviation from the task at hand might signal readiness to break away from it.

"Next you called for the guards, and had them aid you in bringing him to Geram for an examination. I suppose that makes sense — it's difficult to question an unconscious or disabled prisoner."

Jorthen didn’t like the tone being taken so far, nor did he like that the word 'prisoner' had entered the conversation. "Yes, sir."

"But here is where my understanding fails me." The boots stopped, and Jorthen's pen halted in mid-signature as he tensed. "When you checked on the boy this morning and Geram informed you of the proper protocol for this... situation... rather than turn the prisoner over to the proper authorities, you agreed to become his interim guardian. I assume that decision led to the drawing-up of the papers you're currently using as an excuse to avoid eye contact."

Jorthen swallowed a remark about how Atrin had been the only one talking, and instead dragged his pen to the signature's conclusion before setting it aside and straightening to meet his father's stare. "I'm not looking for an excuse, Father — I only want to finish this paperwork before San wakes up."

"San, is it?" Atrin's tone dripped with displeasure. "Is that all the name he has, or have you crafted a pet name for him already?"

"It's what he gave, so it's what I use. He'll give me the rest when he's ready."

The desk shook as Atrin slapped it. Jorthen flinched back instinctively, and Atrin's cold eyes glared down at him, daring him to speak again. "The boy has no rights, Lieutenant. As both a criminal and a trespasser on Reshan soil, he deserves nothing more than a locked cell and enough sustenance to keep him functional until his trial."

Jorthen's fingertips chilled again, and he dragged the papers closer to himself without breaking eye contact with Atrin. With their eyes locked, it was hard to speak, so he formed his words slowly and deliberately. "I'm aware of that. But he's seventeen, and it’s within my rights to help him."

"You would align your reputation with his, simply because he happens to be young? Youth is no excuse for misconduct, especially in the case of... foreigners."

Jorthen's pulse accelerated until his chest ached, and he broke off the staring contest with Atrin he could scrawl out the last two instances of his signature as he answered quietly. "There's more to his story that we don't know yet, and I don't think he's dangerous. If I'm wrong, I'll take responsibility for that."

"And if he harms one of your students? If he steals someone else's property or uses your leniency to take sensitive information back to his people?" Atrin scoffed and leaned over until Jorthen felt hot breath on his forehead. "The Shamindo are not known for being honest or respectable, Lieutenant. They're tricksters and berserkers by nature, and to assume one to be anything else without extensive evidence to the contrary is to invite chaos."

"With all due respect, sir," Jorthen said as he stacked the papers neatly and stood with them in hand, "I think that's my problem, not yours."

Atrin straightened. "And yet I'll be the one left to clean up the mess if you're wrong. But I suppose we'll see how it goes soon enough."

"Yes, sir."

"But Jorthen..."

The words came just as Jorthen had lain his hand on the doorknob to exit. He halted and gripped it without looking back. "Yes, sir?"

The boots scraped again, then halted as Atrin said, "Just remember that if you're wrong, and the Shamindo commits a new crime after you’ve extended asylum to him, the consequences will be dire."

"Like I said, sir, I'll take responsibility if that happens."

"I don't mean for you — I mean for him. Do you think there's a gallows behind the base for no reason?"

The reminder of the structure which had already plagued Jorthen’s thoughts today made him shiver.

“I’m not trying to be cruel, Lieutenant,” Atrin said. “I’m trying to help you.”

“…Thank you, sir,” Jorthen said, and quit the room before the conversation could devolve any further.

He wasn’t hungry, but the day was halfway gone and he’d eaten nothing, so he headed to the mess hall. As usual, it was a bustling echo chamber of laughter, chatter, and egocentricity. The soldiers and students had segregated themselves by rank, and by rapport within those ranks. The youngest recruits were the loudest, and the officers on the far side of the room were the quietest. Once in a while, a young student snuck over to the officers’ section and attempted to flirt with someone there, and every time they were shut down and slunk back to their snickering friends. A few officers glanced Jorthen’s way as he entered, then leaned in and said something that made their companions chuckle and wag their heads.

Jorthen retrieved his lunch — after an uncomfortable two minutes of pretending not to notice how many in line gave him intense once-overs — and retreated to the one empty table across the aisle from the other officers. As usual, they saw him but offered no greeting, and he returned the favor.

The usual whispers drifted past him. All knew there was talk of him being promoted to a full captain soon, given the authority to organize his own missions, to act independently of his superiors in more contexts. Few approved, and most expressed their disapproval through quiet mockery. He ignored them all. Their opinions wouldn’t help him today.

Atrin was right about one thing — taking responsibility for San was risky. Jorthen wasn’t usually one to take risks. However, the idea of fast-tracking a vulnerable youth into prison or to the gallows never sat well with him, and San didn’t seem like a hardened criminal. Damaged, yes, and maybe a bit unhinged, but those weren’t crimes in and of themselves.

The trick would be keeping him on his hinges long enough to learn his story, and remaining patient enough to draw it out of him without incident.

It was with this goal in mind that Jorthen kept his meal brief and was as discreet as possible about returning to his quarters. A few recruits still stopped him along the way, but he brushed them all off in turn. It was a relief to get into the officers’ section where the recruits weren’t meant to follow, and to see that none had chosen to violate that rule at this particular hour. He hoped that meant San had stayed put and been quiet enough not to draw attention.

He knocked on the door before unlocking it, trying to give San as much warning as possible. The image of a trashed, abandoned room flashed through his mind, along with Atrin’s threats regarding what would happen if San caused any more trouble. But when he entered, the room was exactly as he’d left it, except now San was sitting on his cot, baggy uniform all but falling off his skinny shoulders, and a book on zoology in his lap.

Jorthen blinked and shut the door behind him. “You can read?”

“No,” San answered, closing the book. “I just like the pictures.”

“Oh.” Jorthen forced a strained smile. “I see you were right about my uniform. I’m sorry about that.”

San shrugged before setting down the book, then stared at his lap in silence.

Jorthen sighed and plopped down onto his own bed, leaning forward to rest his elbows on his knees in an attempt to look less intimidating. “…San, may I be candid with you about something?”

“What does ‘candid’ mean?”

“It means I want to tell you the truth, even if I don’t think you’ll like it.”

San’s eyes flicked to meet his before dropping again. “Sure.”

“Your arrival has drawn quite a bit of… negative attention. More than half the people I’ve met think you’re a spy. While I know that’s unlikely, I’m not familiar enough with you to prove otherwise. So sometime within the next day or two, I’ll need to conduct a formal interrogation.”

San tensed visibly. “You’re gonna torture me?”

“What? No — no, nothing like that, I promise.” Jorthen clasped his hands and tapped his thumbs against each other as his lips pressed themselves flat. “But, um…’formal’ means I’ll need to have one of my superiors present to ensure a thorough and orderly line of questioning.”

“…Which means…?”

“It means that my f-father…” Jorthen cleared his throat and straightened a little. “My father, Councilman Atrin Lavahr, will likely be present at the interrogation. While he’s not on active duty, he still holds rank in the Guard, and he’s my direct supervisor in most affairs.”

Even if he weren’t, with how dramatically Atrin had reacted to San’s arrival, Jorthen couldn’t imagine him passing up the opportunity to inject himself into the situation now. And if Atrin Lavahr wanted something, he could always find a way to get it, whether he was entitled or not.

San fidgeted and looked even more uncomfortable than he had in Geram’s examination room. “So you won’t be the one asking the questions?”

“Technically I will. My father will likely take a turn, and he might ask some tough questions, but…” He hesitated, trying to read San’s anxious expression. “…I promise I’ll be there the whole time. Even if I’m not the one talking,  I won’t leave. You’ll never be alone in the room with him, or with anyone other than me.”

The relief in San’s face flowed down through the rest of him. He didn’t thank Jorthen, but at least he seemed to trust him, if only a little more than he trusted anyone else in the base. It was a start.

Now Jorthen just had to maintain that trust well enough to keep Atrin from destroying it.

“All right, then,” Jorthen said, straightening fully and tapping his knee in a nervous gesture even as he smiled. “I’ll work on scheduling that soon. First, let’s get you something to eat.”

Friday, March 9, 2018

An Open Letter to Those Who Have Failed

Today I'm writing to everyone who has experienced the sting of failure at something that mattered to them.

You had a goal, maybe one you set for yourself, maybe one assigned to you by an authority figure (a boss, a parent, a teacher), and you were determined to fulfill it to the best of your ability. You knew it would be tough, but you rolled up your sleeves, pushed into the fray, and gave it your all. You put in that overtime, you eliminated distractions, and you pushed past every obstacle that tried to get in your way.

You did your absolute best to ensure that the product of your labors was the pinnacle of perfection...

...and it wasn't. Your essay came back with an undesirable grade stamped at the top, your boss told you to scrap the project and start over (or even fired you), or you created something and put it out into the world only to discover that no-one enjoyed or got anything worthwhile out of it. And in that moment, when the adrenaline rush of having completed your task spiraled down into a sick feeling in the pit of your gut, you had this thought at the forefront of your mind: "I had one job, and I failed."

This letter is for you.


As with many of my posts (of which I know this is the first in a very long time), I'm writing this from a place of experience. As many of you know, in late 2016, I published the third book in my fantasy series, 'The Sehret Chronicles: The Survivor'. And then in 2017, I pulled it from the market and announced that I intended to rewrite it and publish the new edition at an undefined later date.

Those of you who know that much likely also know that at that point, I essentially dropped off the face of the earth as far as writing and blogging were concerned (though, let’s be honest – I’ve never been good at blogging on a regular schedule). What you might not know is why.

When I finished writing 'The Survivor', I faced a rather challenging situation -- where with previous books, I'd been able to recruit more objective third parties to help look over my work and point out problem areas/tell me when I needed to work on something, I faced what one might call a "beta famine". Others were willing to look the book over for me, but found their schedules too busy to allow them to get through the giant of a manuscript I'd sent to them (upwards of 140K words in its first draft form). No matter how many I asked, and how many (I'm sure) fully intended to be of help, I got hardly any feedback, and my self-imposed deadline for publishing the book I'd spent three years writing and editing loomed menacingly.

I had to make a choice -- push back the deadline until I could get more substantial, objective feedback (probably the most sensible option), or rip into the manuscript based on my own judgment and what little input I'd managed to glean from others and publish the book "on time".

And I made what was admittedly a rash and incredibly risky call: I chose the second option. I combed through the book, chopped scenes relentlessly, tuned up as much as I could, and with much terror and stomach-twisting, I uploaded the manuscript and hit 'Publish'.

And it tanked. I mean absolutely, spectacularly TANKED.

This could have been partially due to my subpar self-marketing skills, but I largely blame myself for failing to hold out for better feedback and rushing to publish something that clearly was not ready to be released into the world. Beyond mere low sales figures, the only reviews I got on the book cited a plot in shambles, characters who didn't seem like themselves, and a message that was confusing and, in some places, actually disheartening.

When the first review came in and pointed out these glaring issues, I went to my parents' room in the middle of the night (yup, I'm a low-energy Lymie and still live at home), told my mom about the review, and cried my eyes out. My depression/anxiety/OCD/etc. kicked into overdrive, and my headspace got unspeakably dark. This was my primary method of ministry, of contributing to a world I was rarely able to reach otherwise, and instead of helping my target audience, I'd produced something disappointing and potentially discouraging. I wanted to pull the book right then and never publish anything ever again.

But years of talking to other indie authors have taught me that sometimes a few one- or two-star reviews are mere flukes, and that you shouldn't act on them unless they become a trend. I did not feel the review was malicious or even necessarily incorrect (I take reviews very seriously, especially when I can tell the reader is sincere), but as it was only one, I made the decision to leave the book on the market for a while and see what happened.

And then it came -- the second, lengthy and painstakingly detailed review, relating not only every single thing that I'd felt insecure about during the process of writing and editing the manuscript, but also concerns for aspects of the story with which I had been happy, or felt I'd done well for once. And I cried again. My stomach roiled. I felt like I'd failed utterly, like I could never recover from having thrown so much time and effort and passion into a project for three years of my life and produced a result as catastrophic as this.

This left me with a decision. From my perspective, I could have done one of four things:

1. Left the book on the market, accepted that it was the "black sheep" of the series, and tried to make up for my mistakes with the next installment,
2. Take it off the market and pretend it never existed, either proceeding with a new, completely different book or just leaving the series as-is,
3. Take it off the market and never publish anything again (something I seriously considered more than once), or
4. Take it off the market and try again.

After consulting trusted sources close to me (including an old writing buddy who was invaluable in providing feedback for the first two books), I chose the fourth option. I swallowed my pride (most of it, anyway), unpublished 'The Survivor', and posted my apology to the world, along with the promise that I would undergo a rewrite, and requested prayer, as I'd never done something this drastic before and knew that I would struggle once the euphoria of having a second chance wore off. (It was stressful having something on the market that I felt might not be good enough, and I gleaned some measure of relief from the knowledge that it wasn’t available to potential readers anymore.)

It's been seven months since I made that announcement, and the manuscript for said rewrite is still at... *checks current word count in Scrivener* ...6,587 words.

Yup, you read that correctly -- seven months, and the current version of the rewrite doesn't even contain a thousand words per each month I've been working on it. Granted, this is partially because I've made several attempts and, upon being unhappy with some of them, pulled scenes that would have added onto my measly word count. In any case, rewriting this book has been possibly (I daresay almost certainly) the most difficult thing I've ever done as a writer.

Why? Because every time I open that document or someone asks what I'm working on lately, I'm reminded that the whole reason I'm still working on this book is because I failed. As even one of the aforementioned reviewers acknowledged, I threw my heart and soul into the project and tried my best to make it everything it could and should have been, but still it flopped profoundly.

So every time I try to get back to work and make progress towards what I hope will be a better and more worthwhile result, it feels like I have someone leaning over my shoulder, continually whispering, "You failed. You failed at this once, and you'll fail at it again. You are a failure."

But I’d like to draw your attention to an important element of this post’s title: It is addressed to “Those Who Have Failed”, not to “Those Who Are Failures”.

It is crucial to draw a distinction between the two, and to understand that failing and being a failure as a person are two entirely different things. Everyone fails at something eventually, and while the consequences vary in their nature and severity, we (and especially the perfectionists among us) can all relate to the crushing discouragement that follows, and thus may glean much from the following one-liner that you’ve probably heard a million times:

“If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.”

But why should we “try, try again” when another attempt brings with it the potential to fail again? Would it not be safer to give up, to run up the white flag of surrender and save ourselves the heartache? Why should I put in another several months/years into rewriting a book from scratch when it brought me such agony last time despite everything I put into it?

As to the question of whether it would be “safer”, I would have to say that yes, from the perspective of a fearful human being, the idea of holding back from attempting something (especially something at which you've previously failed) would feel safer. After all, it's difficult to make the same mistake twice if you never make a second attempt at the pursuit in which the mistake was first made. 

To the question of whether it would be better, though, my answer would have to be… maybe not.

The reason I say “maybe” instead of “definitely” is because sometimes there are things we are truly not meant to do, either because they are not worthwhile pursuits or because they’re simply not part of God’s plan for us. So the first step following any failure should be to ask ourselves (and, more importantly, God) whether what we failed in doing is something we are meant to do.

If the answer is no, the next step should be to let go – there’s no point to continuing in something that wasn’t meant for you, and neither is there anything to be gained by holding onto guilt and regret over falling short in the pursuit of something that you weren’t meant to achieve. It’s okay. You’re allowed to not excel at some things, and you’re certainly allowed (and I would encourage you) to step away if you feel that what you are pursuing is getting in the way of something more important. God is the ultimate giver of second chances, and you can always seek Him and pursue His will anew, even if you find you've strayed from it before now. 

If the answer is yes, then that’s when you really need to buckle down and get brave. Because with every new beginning, there is risk. There is the potential for stress and failure and heartache, and there’s no way of knowing what lies on the road between where you begin and where you’re trying to go.

But is the risk of embarrassment or a temporary emotional low really worth turning away from something God has set before you to do?

This is where my answer has to be a resounding NO. And let me tell you why.

First off, if you’ve already consulted God (through prayer, the Bible, and the input of godly advisors) and determined that the seemingly failed pursuit is one you’re meant to undertake, nothing else matters. Nothing. Not fear, not shame, not any insecurities you might have (remember, Moses had speech difficulties and thought he wasn’t worthy of speaking on God’s behalf because of it). If God has set you on a path, He has a purpose for it, whether you see it or not, and He will bring you through it, no matter how many times you think you’ve faltered or even fallen along the way.


“Being confident of this very thing, that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.”

- Philippians 1:6, KJV


"Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding.

In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths."

- Proverbs 3:5-6, KJV


Second, if what you’re doing is for God and backed by His will, you can bet that any doubts and fears that might arise are not from Him. After all, if God is with you in your pursuits, then who are you doubting when you think things like, “I can’t do this”? It would be understandable to doubt yourself, as a fallible human being, especially when the Bible explicitly says that “without [God], ye can do nothing” (John 15:5, KJV). But if you’re doing God’s will and leaning on Him for the strength to follow through, then to doubt your future is to doubt Him. And that is an entirely different matter.

If we truly trust in God to direct our paths, we have no reason to fear, because He knows the way and is infinitely capable of getting us to the end of the road, regardless of our own inadequacies.


“For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.

Be not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me his prisoner: but be thou partaker of the afflictions of the gospel according to the power of God;

Who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began.”

- 2 Timothy 1:7-9, KJV

Third and finally, anything done for God is done with eternal benefits in mind, and thus, continuing in a difficult task when God is in it will ALWAYS be better and more worthwhile than anything we might lose in the process (time, energy, comfort, pride, etc.), and is certainly well worth the risk. 

This is why, despite how atrociously behind I am in my writing goals, no matter how badly I feel about myself as a writer or how much I would like to throw in the towel and give up trying, I refuse to give up. This is not out of pride or stubbornness (although I'd be lying if I said those never play a role in my decisions or my resolve), but rather because I believe God has set this task before me, and even if I failed the first time, I have to believe there was some purpose to my efforts (even if it was just to teach me a lesson -- for example, not to rush to publication like that again), and that what God has in store for me is worth pursuing. Because while I may have failed, and may often think of myself as a failure, God is not and has not, and I can trust Him to do His will through me regardless. 

I just have to press on, keep a stiff upper lip, and trust that the infallible God I serve will use even my stumbling efforts to His glory. 

If God is in what you're doing, then even your failures (crushing as they may seem at the moment) will lead to a greater victory in Him. This is our hope and our promise in the face of even the most devastating failure. 

Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before,

I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.

Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded: and if in any thing ye be otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you.

Nevertheless, whereto we have already attained, let us walk by the same rule, let us mind the same thing.”

- Philippians 3:13-16, KJV



Rejoice in the Lord (a cappella) - Hamilton Family

Tuesday, August 8, 2017

A Brief Announcement Regarding Sehret #3

Hello, dear readers. I hope you're all having a wonderful night (or day, depending upon when you read this). I come to you all tonight with an announcement that has been months in the making.

After much time spent praying, reflecting, and consulting trusted people around me, I have decided to unpublish the current edition of 'The Sehret Chronicles #3: The Survivor' and publish a rewrite at a later date. Some readers found it confusing and poorly executed, and upon review, I agree with them. While I'm not sure yet how long this rewrite will take or exactly what changes will be implemented, I will make every effort to produce a more polished and enjoyable second edition.

Anyone who has purchased the book in eBook format, fear not -- when the new edition is published, you should receive the new version as an update to the one you already own. I should note, however, that this means I will not be releasing a fourth book until this situation with the third is remedied as much as possible.

I apologize for any confusion or inconvenience this might cause, and covet your prayers as I undergo this process. Thank you, and God bless.

Monday, October 24, 2016

Book Release Announcement! (The Sehret Chronicles #3: The Survivor)

The time has come -- the day is here...

One book more!

...Okay, I shall now switch out of Broadway musical mode and get to the point of my post. You may have noticed that I have not been very active on here for the past several months. There is a reason for this -- I have been hard at work getting the third book of The Sehret Chronicles publication-ready. It's taken up a lot of my time, attention, and energy, and I am pleased to announce that at last, there is a third book on the market!

The Survivor, formerly known as The Rescuer, picks up directly where the first book, The Follower, left off. Here's the back-cover blurb, for more info:

The ragtag group thrown together by a cave-in in 'The Follower' have reached the surface of the Rhenor mountains, and have plotted their course to Delnam, where they will part ways at last. Their adventure takes them through the hostile Kirat territories, but as long as they keep to themselves and are careful to avoid the locals, they expect to reach their destination safely.

When Zarea Kal, a Kirat runaway, brings her pursuers crashing down on the camp, the group united by circumstance is rent apart once more. Now those taken captive must fight for their freedom, and those already free must survive long enough to set things right.

But even with their enemies occupied, the battle for their souls and sanity still rages, and demons -- either real or of the mind -- refuse to retreat into the shadows that spawned them.

The battle for survival is not over. It has only just begun.


This release has been three years in the making, but at last it is here, and the book is now live at the links located at the bottom of this post (you can read what's written above it, or skip ahead -- it's up to you).

Not sure you're interested based on that description alone? Here's a sneak peek from the beginning of the book:

----------------------------
Prologue

The man looked dead, but it was hard to be sure. In the light of the dying lantern above him, his face was blank, his eyes shut, and his chest too obscured for Zarea Kal to be sure it was not moving. The keys at his belt swayed and glittered like jewels, tantalizing her in a way no true gem ever could. She watched them with eyes wide, her bow primed to notch and let loose another arrow if the man rose.
Beside her, Darek whispered, “What are we waiting for?”
Zarea silenced him with a wave of her hand, and her eyes flitted about the area. A small camp, three men guarding it, none well-armed. Their chest of supplies sat open to the air, dragged out earlier by the largest of the three to allow for easier access during the supper hour. That might have been wise, considering how much they ate from it. But they'd never bothered to drag it back into the tent.
And that was their mistake.
The brawny guard still did not stir, but Zarea thought she heard him mumble something unintelligible, and she released a shaky breath. The man was alive, and she lacked the nerve to change that. Hopefully, he would have the decency to stay unconscious until they were gone. She notched another arrow and rose to a crouch. “Let's go.”
Darek nodded, and they advanced. Zarea led the way into the camp and slowed her step as she approached the man she'd shot. The sedative-coated arrow that pierced his shoulder remained in place, and Zarea's eyes flitted to the wound before she forced them to move away. She dropped by his side and fumbled with the knot that tethered the keys to his belt. She grabbed at what she thought was the right end to loosen it and yanked.
The keys jangled.
“Kali!” The hissed nickname made her look up. Darek gestured wildly to his belt and glanced at the tent nearby.
Of course. Zarea pulled a knife from her belt and began to saw. A few heart-jolting clanks later, she pulled the keys free.
A breeze blew through, and the corner of one of the tent flaps flipped enough for Zarea to see inside. Her heart leapt to her throat at the sight of the two sleeping men inside.
She inhaled deeply and pulled an arrow from her quiver, then held it in her left hand like a dagger while gripping the keys tightly in her right. Darek rushed to her side and took the keys, then moved swiftly to the chest of supplies. After several agonizing moments of peering into the lock, of sticking one key after another into it without success, finally there was a click and he pulled the key free. He glanced at Zarea and lifted the lid.
Zarea’s breath caught at the sight of the contents. Stores of dried meat, of bread, and even a bag of dried berries sat before them. They were not much to look at, but she could not turn away, and her mouth watered. How pathetic that she should desire these withered old morsels after seventeen years of having plenty without having to lift a finger.
Darek rifled through the chest to see if there was anything else of use, then gestured to Zarea and mouthed, “The bag.”
Zarea rushed back to their hiding spot and snatched up the empty satchel she'd left there. A few stale crumbs fell to the ground, and she left them for the men to find. She and Darek stuffed as much as they could into the satchel, stuffing a fair amount into their mouths, as well.
The food stuck in Zarea’s throat, and she coughed, then froze wide-eyed. She waited for the men to wake up, to rush out and see who it was that was coughing on their precious food. But no-one came.
Darek’s eyes were equally wide, his lips cracked as he whispered, “Water. They must have some.”
Zarea tried to think. If she were these men, traveling through the plains in the dry season, where would she keep a precious commodity such as water? Not in this chest – she knew that already. She would want it nearby, easy to reach when the need for refreshment hit her.
Her eyes strayed to the tent, through the flap as it waved in the wind, and she caught sight of something that might be a jug by the larger man's bedroll.
Darek followed her gaze, and his face turned ashen as he shook his head. “No, Kali. They'll wake up.”
“We need water.” Her knees wobbled, but she forced them to hold her up as she crept to the tent and pulled back the flap. She caught her breath as the light fell through the crack, all the way to the jug and the man sleeping beside it. He stirred.
A pair of hands clapped over her mouth and yanked her back from the tent. She gasped, fumbled for the knife sheathed inside her tunic.
“Keep still,” a familiar voice hissed in her ear. “I'm not going to hurt you.”
Zarea ripped herself free of Darek’s grasp. “If you grab me again, I'll stab you.”
“Go in there, and they'll kill us both.” Darek lifted the full satchel of food. “Please, Kali – we have enough for a while. We'll reach the mountain soon, and when–”
“Stop telling me what to do,” Zarea snapped, snatching her confiscated longknife from his grasp. She lifted her chin imperiously. “I give the orders here, remember? We need water, and I'm getting it. Now stand guard.”
Darek opened his mouth to protest, then clamped it shut and pulled his own bow free, notching an arrow as he nodded and raised it to its ready position.
Zarea took a deep breath and, with her knife raised, stepped into the tent. Every breath the sleeping men took, every twitch or mumbled word made her jump, and she had to fight the urge to turn and run as fast as her legs would carry her. She reached the big man's side and held her breath, afraid the slightest noise would bring about sudden death. She saw the jug, about eight inches tall, and nearly as wide, just past the stranger's head. She tensed, took a careful step, placed her foot mere inches away from his head, certain he would wake and sweep it out from under her. Still his snores filled the tent.
The jug was inches away now. All she had to do was lean a bit, reach out, pull it ever so carefully over his head, and...
The jug’s weight knocked her off balance, and before she could so much as reach out to stop herself, she fell and found herself sprawled over the man's brawny chest.
And that was when he gasped, his eyes flew open, and he threw Zarea back as he groped for his sword. “What...”
Across the tent, his companion stirred. Zarea slugged the man beside her and, in the split-second before he could react, snatched his smaller water canteen from beside him and took off. Hands reached for her. She pulled away, dove out of the tent. Footsteps shuffled behind her and pounded into the open.
An arrow whizzed free of Darek’s bow, and Zarea heard a strangled cry as it hit home. She dashed forward to join Darek, but stumbled and bumped against his arm, and another arrow flew loose, far off-course. It hit the ground beside the larger man, who snatched it up as though it were a child's dart thrown too far from its target. Darek stepped backwards, fumbled for the knife on his boot.
The big man swung the arrow at him. Darek ducked, cried out, used the man's weight against him to throw him to the ground, and fell with him.
The less imposing man charged at Zarea. Fear had stolen away her sense of forethought – with a flick, her knife flew, and the man fell. Zarea gasped, her hand at her mouth. She hadn't meant to throw it. She didn't even know where she'd hit him.
Darek's cry of pain drew her attention back to the fight on the ground. Zarea turned, notched an arrow.
She needn't have bothered. Darek swung a fist, and the man cried out, freeing him. Zarea did not have time to process what had happened before Darek grabbed her wrist and yanked at it. “Run!”
Zarea barely managed to retrieve the food satchel as Darek dragged her along with him at top speed. Soon they put a fair amount of distance between them and the camp, and Zarea wondered why the big man hadn't followed them. Why had he not mounted one of his horses and taken off after them by now?
But she knew why, and the reason made her double over retching.
Darek stumbled from the sudden stop and fell to his knees a few feet away.
“I killed him,” Zarea gasped, unbelieving. “Darek, I killed that man.”
Darek did not answer, and at once Zarea noticed that his breathing was different, quivering, punctuated with gasps and suppressed groans. She stumbled over to him. “Darek, what...?”
That was when she saw the blood.
Her eyes grew wide. “He stabbed you!”
“It’s fine,” he rasped. His eyes were full of pain, but he set his jaw in determination. “Just a scratch... Caught me off-guard.”
“That is not a scratch,” Zarea snapped. “We have to find help.”
“The mountain,” he coughed.
Zarea groaned. “Hang the mountain – I never want to hear of it again!”
“The mountain, Kali,” Darek insisted. “There are places there, places to rest, find water, and herbs to treat wounds. We can find them.”
“This was a mistake.” Zarea blinked back tears and fought to keep a stern edge to her voice. “Darek, I was wrong. We never should have left home. We need to go back. We need to find my mother and tell her–”
“We’d never make it,” Darek said firmly, his voice stronger than before. His blue eyes pleaded with her brown ones. “We’ve gone too far into the wilderness. We can't turn back now.”
Zarea shook her head violently. “No. We can make it, and once we're home–”
“We’d die before we got there, or they’d kill me. And I’m not sending you off on your own.” Darek gripped her hand tightly, using his free hand to push against the ground for support to sit upright. He grimaced as the pain overtook him again. “Help me walk.”
She helped him to his feet, and for several steps, he leaned heavily on her as he tried to regain his bearings. But at last, he nodded and released his hold on her shoulder. “Let go. I can do it on my own.”
“You're sure?”
He nodded, still pale, his expression tormented as he lifted his eyes towards the looming Rhenor mountains. “Let's get going.”
----------------------------

If you'd like to read a longer excerpt, go the Smashwords page for the book and download a sample there (the first 20% of the book, completely free to read), or read up through the beginning of chapter two here.



Paperback Links:

E-Book Links:

Alternatively, if you would prefer a signed copy, you can contact me at my author e-mail, contact.cfbarrows@gmail.com and order one directly from me. Books purchased from me are $12 USD plus shipping. Haven't read the first two books? That's okay! You can check them out on Goodreads or at the links below:

The Follower
(Book One)

Paperback Links:

E-Book Links:


The Merchant's Son
(Book Two, prequel to The Follower)

Paperback Links:

E-Book Links:

If you read the books and like them (or just have something to say about them that you want other potential readers to know, even if it doesn't warrant a full five stars), I'd really appreciate it if you'd leave a review. Reviews are one of the most effective ways to spread the word about a book, and are invaluable to indie authors like me. But either way, I hope you have a blessed day and enjoy whatever books you do choose to read, whether they're mine or someone else's. (If you're a fan of Christian fantasy, my personal recommendation would be to check out Jill Williamson's books. They're fantastic. I'm also checking out R. J. Larson's work now, but I haven't read enough to have an opinion on her work yet -- I shall let you know when I do. The world can always use some more good, clean speculative reads.)

Have any book recommendations you'd like to share? Questions about the book I've just released? Feel free to comment below! I'll try my utmost to reply. Releasing a new book is always nerve-wracking, so I should be spending a lot of time online, checking on things, updating other things, talking about all the things on the social networking... um... places, and...

Yeah, basically, there's a good chance I'll reply this time around. And I shall endeavor to do more with the blog in general, now that the most daunting item is off of my to-do list. Maybe I'll even post more installments in the short stories I've previously posted...

...But I digress.

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Woe to the Five ('King's Folly' Review and Song)

I suppose you’re all wondering why I’ve gathered you here today.

Sorry, I had to say that. *ahem* Welcome, digressors. As per the title, I am here today to deliver a final review of ‘King’s Folly’, book one of Jill Williamson’s ‘The Kinsman Chronicles’, as the sum of its parts (’Darkness Reigns’, ‘The Heir War’, and ‘The End of All Things’). I could just give you a flat-out summary of my thoughts on the book, and if that’s what you want, feel free to scroll down to the end and catch the TL;DR (Too Long; Didn’t Read) version. But if you have the time and the patience to bear with me for a bit, I would like very much to tell you a story.

If you’ve been following me and/or my blog for very long, you’ve probably gathered by now that I’m a bit of a Jill Williamson fangirl. Mind you, I am also a fangirl of other people and things (such as J. R. R. Tolkien, C. S. Lewis, and Doctor Who), but Jill’s work is of particular interest to me because she is a contemporary author writing in one of my favorite genres and does it very well. (Plus she’s just a great person in general, but I’m getting off-topic now.)

Really, though, get out there right now and try to track down as many good Christian fantasy novels as you can. Difficult, isn’t it? At least it always is for me. I might find a book or two on occasion by an author I don’t know, but to find a single author whose work I consistently like and feel confident in recommending to others is a luxury I prize.

My first experience with Jill’s books was ‘By Darkness Hid’. I read the entire ‘Blood of Kings’ trilogy and came out of it euphoric from the excitement of what I’d discovered. Along the way, I also managed to drag some of my teenage friends, my mother, and a few complete strangers into the fandom, but when I myself reached the end of the series, I found myself hungering for more. One Christy Award-winning trilogy (two books out of three won it) was, of course, a wonderful thing to experience, but once it was over, where was I supposed to get my fantasy fix?

Cue sometime last year when I caught the announcement that Jill was writing a new fantasy series, with different characters and cultures, but in the same general world (hundreds of years beforehand) as ‘Blood of Kings’. To say I was excited would be a gross understatement. I feared I would spontaneously combust from excitement before I ever had a chance to read the new books.

Now imagine how my excitement piqued when I discovered that Jill was building a launch team to help promote the book and the three eBooks of which it was comprised. The list of responsibilities was a bit intimidating for me, an awkward introvert with little skill for marketing, but being on the team would give me the opportunity to read all three eBooks beforehand and even receive my own copy of the full novel. So of course, I leapt on the opportunity, typed up my application as quickly as I could, and submitted it, euphoric with the very idea that I might get to experience the new series sooner than I had anticipated and have an excuse to fangirl unashamedly.

But true to my anxious manner, soon after submitting I began to prep myself for disappointment. Surely there would be many people who applied, and many of them would have much better marketing skills than I. By the end of October, when Jill was due to send out e-mails to those who made the team, I was utterly convinced that I had no chance of receiving such a missive. I resigned myself to waiting and began to make other plans for my time.

And then I got the e-mail. Against all odds, I was in. I didn’t know how exclusive the group might be (after all, as I said, Jill is a nice person, and I felt there was a good chance I was only recruited because of the sheer excitement I related in my application), but the instant I received that confirmation, all the old excitement came flooding back, and more. Anxiety also reared its head as I was faced again with my own woeful lack of experience with the successful promotion of books, no matter whose they were.

But — and this is a testament to just how much I wanted to read the book, and how badly I wanted an excuse to further promote Jill’s work — I decided to push through my own hesitations and do my best. I figured if nothing else, I could take cues from the more experienced members of the group and just follow their lead, and maybe I would look like I knew what I was doing.

My discomfort increased as I received the digital ARCs (Advance Reading Copies) of the books and saw that, as Jill had warned, this series would not be geared towards teens, or at least not young ones — it was geared towards a more mature audience, and while what mature content existed was handled in such a way that the reader would not get inappropriately caught up in it, just the simple fact that it was there made me, an awkward person from very conservative circles, nervous. What if I kept reading and it got more awkward? What if it was handled carefully in the beginning, but for whatever reason it devolved later? What if I had signed on to promote something and had to drop out a few weeks in because I couldn’t support the content? But I decided to keep the faith and keep reading, knowing that Jill had produced good, wholesome content consistently thus far, and reminding myself that sometimes darkness (when applied in moderation) can later give birth to much greater light.

The long and short of it is this: it was worth it.

Once I pushed past my initial discomfort, I got caught up with the characters and their stories. In the beginning I connected with Wilek and his sense of honor and responsibility, then my allegiance became divided when Trevn bounded into the picture and stole my heart with his winsome manner and boundless energy. (I think if I met the two in real life, I would have a very difficult time keeping up with Trevn and would instead end up sitting around talking with Wilek while Trevn ran off to some adventure somewhere.) Charlon, while her goals conflicted with those of the main characters and drove her to some ends which… well, you can find out what those ends were for yourself… was still a sympathetic character and I felt her pain deeply throughout all three parts. And Mielle… Well, she reminded me a bit of Vrell from ‘Blood of Kings’, except that thus far Mielle has not made me want to throw an iPad across the room out of frustration. (Don’t get me wrong — Vrell was a good character. But she did have her… *ahem*… moments.)

Even with the warnings that this story would take place long, long before ‘Blood of Kings’ and many things would be different, I was not prepared for just how different things would be. But that was not necessarily a bad thing. On the contrary, I found the culture (or cultures, rather) fascinating, and felt that even with as much as was articulated throughout the story, there was a world’s worth of information and depth beneath the surface that I as the reader could only dream of learning. The religions in particular intrigued me in how each of them evolved from their origins and, with all their differences, shared some things in common. I found this made them more believable, as many real-world religions have a few common elements (a moral code of some kind, end-times prophecies, references to past events that were interpreted very differently through the lens of different worldviews, etc.). If they were all too similar to each other or too starkly different from one another, it might have felt contrived, but they were not, and it did not.

On that same topic of religion, I liked how the assortment of similarities and differences between faiths created a natural confusion for the characters, leading them on a treasure hunt for truth wherein the reader gets to tag along and also come to those conclusions for themselves. Rather than shoving a sermon into the reader’s face, instead the narrative says, “Here are the facts, here are the issues — now look and judge for yourself which one is the truth.” And this, to me, makes the whole thing that much more effective. I must also admit to a certain degree of envy, as I struggle with this very area in my own writing. Believe me, it’s a difficult balance to maintain.

In addition to the above points, it all just felt so real. I swear if I fell asleep reading ‘King’s Folly’ and was groggy enough when I woke, I might be confused to open my eyes and see my own real-world room when I’d only just been in the five realms, clinging to medieval furniture as the Five Woes shook the land beneath my feet. I could forget, in my reverie, that the characters I read about were not, in fact, real people, and that the peril and suffering they endured was only penned by a human author onto paper and bound up in a book. Certainly, by the time I got to the end, I was tempted to just pick the book up again and read it from cover to cover to reunite with the characters and their world again.

Well, okay, technically I did pick it up again. I basically carried it around everywhere hoping someone would ask about it so I could babble to them about how much they needed to read it.

And now, in summary, I shall give you the long-awaited…

TL;DR VERSION 

If you are a mature teen or adult fan of epic fantasy, Christian or otherwise, you should read this book. There are thematic elements to deal with due to the culture in which the books are set, but from the beginning of ‘King’s Folly’ to its end, I could see the progression beginning from darkness to light. Besides which fact, the storytelling was stellar, the worldbuilding was rich, and the characters were like living people who just happened to end up living inside a book. I admit to being quite impatient for the next book’s release.

If you're interested, just go to the Goodreads pages for the book below, or go for the first installment, 'Darkness Reigns', and try that out for free if you're not ready to commit to the full story.

King's Folly: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25822052-king-s-folly

Darkness Reigns: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26108314-darkness-reigns

Oh, yes, and as for the "song" part of the post... Yes, well, I suppose I should make good on that, shouldn't I? Well, a couple of days ago, I sat down and wrote a ballad inspired by 'King's Folly', recorded it a cappella and added filters to make it fit the feel a bit more. If you want something to listen to as you start in on the series or just to get an idea of what's in store, give it a listen on SoundCloud here, or click on the YouTube video below.


Monday, April 11, 2016

The Runaway - Part Three

Hey again, digressors. How are things going for everyone? Things have been interesting for me. A combination of physical and mental health issues have made getting things done complicated, but at last I appear to be on a bit of an upswing, so I am again getting a few things done. And among those things I'm doing is writing! I'm doing Camp NaNoWriMo, as I do twice a year, every year, regardless of whether I have much chance of winning. It gives a distractible person such as me a bit more motivation to be organized and set achievable goals. 

Speaking of distractibility, you probably didn't click on this post to hear me talk about my schedule, did you? Well, if you did, I apologize, because at the moment I don't have much of a schedule to speak of -- just a list of things I need to catch up on doing. So as I run off to do some of that catching up, I shall give you something that is long overdue... 

The Runaway
Part Three


The rest of the day passed in a blur of classes and practice sessions with some of the more established recruits, and the next morning Jorthen awoke to more of the same. Except by morning, there were also whispers everywhere, and if he listened hard enough, he heard words like “Shamindo”, “spy”, and “horse thief”. 
“I heard,” said a wide-eyed, raven-haired girl who had arrived with last month’s batch of new recruits, “that he set fire to a family’s house so that he could have their horse. That way there were no witnesses, and so he would have gotten away with it if Lieutenant Lavahr hadn't caught him.” 
Caught him, indeed. Jorthen quickened his step to get past the clump of teenagers before they could spot him. Besides the sensitivity of the issue, the fond tone the girl adopted when she said his name unnerved him even more. 
When he arrived at Geram’s quarters — just off of the medical room — he took an extra moment to listen at the door before knocking on it. He heard no yelling or objects smashing, only a less than intelligible grumbling, so he gave himself permission to enter. 
The door creaked as he opened it, and across the room, Geram spoke but didn't turn. “About time you got here.” 
“I’m sorry, I was delayed.” Jorthen walked forward until he could see past Geram and smiled politely to avoid grimacing. “Good morning, San.” 
The boy sat quietly as Geram worked on him, but his eyes flitted just as nervously as ever between Geram and Jorthen. He was upright this time, and his hands fiddled nervously with each other in his lap. They were burned, but not nearly as badly as his back, which was thankfully turned away from Jorthen. 
In lieu of getting an answer, Jorthen cleared his throat and addressed Geram. “Is he fit to be moved yet?” 
“He’d better be, if your recruits are going to keep crowding the area in an attempt to see him.” Geram cut a length of bandages free and flung the roll back into its respective basket. “I’m a physician, not a showman.” 
“I apologize,” Jorthen said. “If you say he’s well enough, I’ll work on finding him a place to stay.” 
“You mean you’ll be taking him to confinement.” 
Jorthen blinked. “Confinement? Why would I do that?” 
Geram sighed heavily and wrapped the new bandage around San’s freshly salved arm. “The boy’s a criminal, Lavahr. He has to face trial.” He hesitated in his work and said more quietly, “Sorry, lad. That’s the way it works around here.” 
San swallowed hard and looked at his still twitching hands without response. 
Something about the reminder of how the system worked awoke a knotting feeling in Jorthen’s stomach. He glanced at the door. “What if I took him?” 
“We’ve just addressed that.” 
“No, I mean if I took him into my custody.” He turned again to look at Geram. “I could do that, couldn’t I? Take responsibility for him until the council decides what to do with him?” 
Geram studied Jorthen and seemed to mull over his question as he secured the bandage. “Aye, I suppose you could. But it would involve paperwork.” 
“I’m used to paperwork.” 
A raspy voice asked, “Would I live with you?” 
Jorthen had nearly forgotten how much the smoke had affected San’s voice. Or was it always like that? He stepped forward cautiously. “It would be safer. But then, it would also mean you’d have to follow me around a fair amount. I’d be your guardian.” 
“I don’t trust guardians.” 
“…An older brother, then. Temporarily. How does that sound?” 
San flinched and coughed a few times but didn’t manage to articulate a response. 
Jorthen chose not to wait for his approval. “Geram, will you help him get cleaned up and ready to go while I clear the way?” 
Geram nodded. “Just so long as he cooperates with me and you don’t try to rush me into releasing him before I’m through with him.” 
“Fair enough,” Jorthen said. “San, I’ll be back in a few minutes.” 
“Fine,” San managed, then said no more as Jorthen turned and left the room. 
———————
“All right, now you listen well, lad, and know it’s for your own good. For the next week or two, you come back in here once a day so I can check on those burns and make sure everything’s in its place. You can tell Lieutenant Lavahr I said so, and he’ll listen. If you go running off or don’t show up for check-ups, I won’t be able to help you. You understand?” 
San wasn’t sure what part of his silence made him look like an idiot to outsiders, but at least Geram’s lectures weren’t violent. He nodded and bit his cheek hard to distract from the way the motion made his head ache. He didn’t know what kind of air was actually in the room, but it tasted like smoke, and his lungs still burned with every breath. Would the old man be able to fix that in any of these check-ups? 
“You know, we’ll have to do something about this strong, silent act of yours,” Geram said, lightly cuffing one of the few unburned patched on San’s arm. San managed to limit his defensive reflexes to a twitch this time. “I can do my work just fine with your silence, and Lavahr will make do with it, but you won’t fare well at trial if you don’t speak up in your own defense.” 
“Don’t matter,” San croaked. 
“Sure it does. Why wouldn’t it?” 
San looked down at his hands and fiddled with them to avoid looking at Geram. Maybe if he just didn’t speak, the man would give up on talking to him and leave. 
“You know, the council’s feelings for Shamindo illegals are less hard than they used to be. If you can give a good reason for your crime, they might let you off.” 
“Can’t.” 
Geram stepped back and sighed heavily. “And just why’s that?” 
San dragged his gaze up to meet Geram’s. But then the memories he had came flooding back. A pale face turning purple. His hands screaming as they gripped something fleshy and fragile. Claws in his head and the scent of wood burning as beams came crashing down around him. 
His head split again, and he grimaced as he grabbed at it and moaned. 
“Easy there,” Geram said, and patted the pillow that sat on the bed to San’s left. “You lie down yourself — I’m not risking it.” 
San struggled to keep his breathing even as he followed the man’s orders. He pitched to the side and nearly fell off the bed, but Geram caught him and eased him onto his back. So much for not intervening. San wanted to scream, to tell Geram to leave him alone, to weep and to thank the physician for caring all at once, but all that came out was a pathetic whimper. 
“Pathetic little meatbag. Did you really think you could defy me?” 
As soon as the words surfaced in his mind, he panicked, stuffed them back into their box and clamped his eyes shut. It wasn’t real. It was just your imagination. It didn’t happen. 
But what if it did? 
He didn’t know. He just didn’t know anything anymore. 
He could feel Geram’s eyes on him still, could hear the silent question echoing on the air between them. 
“C-can’t tell them,” San wheezed. “’Cause I don’t remember.” 
———————
“Because I said so, that’s why,” Jorthen told the disgruntled crowds as they groaned at him. “San might have broken a few laws, but he’s been through a traumatic experience, and things will work out better for everyone if we can all just give him a little space to recover.” 
“Why are you protecting him?” 
“I’m protecting all of you, not just him. His defensive reflexes are strong, so if you go after him, expect him to fight back.” 
Most of the crowd continued to murmur, but dispersed, except one heckler who called out, “You can’t hide him forever, Lavahr! If he’s a spy, we all have a right to know.” 
“He’s not a spy,” Jorthen said flatly, “and he’ll be in my custody as soon as Geram clears him for release. Now are you going to follow my orders, or do I have to speak to your supervisor about your insubordination?” 
The heckler glared at him, then spun on his heel and strode away, shoving his way through the rest of the crowd. 
Jorthen deflated as soon as the crowd was gone, and without the noise, his head grew a good deal clearer. And with that clarity came the first doubts he’d allowed himself to humor since San had tumbled into his life yesterday evening. Why was he taking responsibility for a criminal? Young or not, injured or otherwise, he’d stolen someone’s horse, and unless the Guard could track them down and obtain their permission to release San, that fact could very well get him executed under Reshan law. That would mean that Jorthen had just agreed to take charge of someone who was one trial short of death row. What sort of damage might that do to his law-abiding reputation? 
But the memory of those haunted green eyes flitting about in terror and the long scars raked across the boy’s back brought back enough determination to send him striding determinedly to the inspector’s office to start the paperwork. 
It took him all of ten minutes to sign the most essential documents and get ahold of the stack which he had left to sort through, and as he walked back through the halls, he checked around every corner to be sure there were no more lurkers about. 
He reached Geram’s door and knocked twice, then entered. The sight of San flat on his back gave him pause. “Do you need more time?” 
San’s eyes opened and Geram moved to help him sit up, but his efforts were denied, and soon the boy sat upright and slid onto his feet beside the bed. He pulled self-consciously at his right sleeve to cover a set of horizontal scars on the inside of his wrist and said nothing to either of the other men. 
Geram approached Jorthen and handed him a satchel containing whatever supplies a physician deemed necessary for a recuperating criminal. “He’ll need this. See to it that he comes to check-ups regularly.” 
“Thank you, sir,” Jorthen said, and slung the satchel over his shoulder. “San, you ready to go?” 
San nodded and shuffled forward, glancing wordlessly at Geram as he passed. 
Jorthen led him out of the room and through the halls, where despite his efforts, a few people still managed to show up and gawk. San made no remark about them, but inched closer to Jorthen until their elbows nearly touched. 
“It’s all right,” Jorthen said. “I won’t let them hurt you.” 
Another nod, followed by more silence. The merest hint that San might have begun to trust him. 
Jorthen only hoped his trust wouldn’t prove to be horribly misplaced. 
They got to Jorthen’s quarters, and Jorthen gestured to the lone bed in the back corner as he set his stack of papers onto his desk. “You can use my bed if you need it. I have a spare bedroll I can lay out when it’s time to sleep.” 
San glanced at the bed, then stared up at the ceiling. 
Jorthen followed his gaze and frowned. “What? Is there a spot I’m not seeing?” 
“There aren’t any cracks.” 
“…Yes, and…?” 
San shrugged and looked at the bed again. “Must be nice.” 
His voice was as scratchy as ever, but something about the different environment seemed to have put San more at ease. Why else would he say more in the first minute here than in the night and day he’d spent in Geram’s quarters? 
Jorthen cleared his throat and nodded. “It is. Anyhow, you should probably be warned that I snore. My first roommate was a light sleeper, so he complained about it.” 
“I scream.” 
“In your sleep?” 
“Halfway.” San made his way to a bedside table and poked at a lantern there so hard that it shifted to the edge of the surface. 
Jorthen lunged, then stopped himself as San righted the lantern on his own. He inhaled deeply. “The cabinet in the far corner should have some spare clothes. You can try on anything you think might fit.” 
San sniffed. “No offense,” he said, “but I don’t think your clothes would even stay on me.” 
More words. Spiteful, perhaps, but they were words, at least. “Some of my old things might. I didn’t join up last week, after all.” 
“I still don’t—” 
“Here,” Jorthen interrupted, then strode to the cabinet and pulled out an old but well-maintained uniform from when he was fifteen or sixteen. This he held out to San. “Try this one. We can worry about boots later.” 
San barely had time to accept the clothes and eye them suspiciously before Jorthen headed for the door. “Where are you going?” 
Jorthen halted and fought a growing itch in his legs. “I have other responsibilities to address. I’ll be back soon.” 
Silence met his words, and San looked back down at the clothes, suspicion fading into blankness. 
“San,” Jorthen said. 
He looked. 
“I will be back. I promise.” 
“…If you say so.” 
“I do say it,” Jorthen affirmed. “So don’t go anywhere. Understood?” 
Another sniff. “Sure.” 
Good enough. Jorthen obeyed his itch and left the room, but locked the door behind him, just in case San should get it into his head to wander. An angry seventeen-year-old would be much easier to face than the possible consequences if the same boy got loose and fell under the scrutiny of those who already resented his presence. All the same, Jorthen hoped the hints of spite that had gleamed through in the room would not prove to become his usual manner. If they did, well… keeping him safe might soon become exponentially more difficult.