Showing posts with label Magick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magick. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

A to Z Blog Challenge - U





Welcome to Day 21 of the  A to Z Blog Challenge. Today:


U

is for

Underground Magick


For those of you who have been following my challenge all month, you'll know that the first half was also a blog tour for my dark fantasy, BOUND BY DRAGONSFYRE.

In my interviews I was asked about my next project, which is the sequel to Scorpius' story. For today's 'U' post, I'll give a little preview of the second book in the Dragonsfyre series.

These books take place in a land called the Eighth Dominion, one of twelve provinces ruled over by the emperor. In this land's history, magick was once practised openly, until a religious order rose to power and linked the devastating dragon attacks to the practise of magick.

At that time, the monks were installed as imperial advisors, while anyone unfortunate enough to be known as an adept at magick was hunted down and weeded out. Those who continued to be born with the gifts of sight and who wielded control of magick were forced at an early age to keep these aspects of themselves a closely-guarded secret.

Two major characters in the new book, which will be releasing later this summer, have made their way through the world by keeping their magick a secret. Yet both of them feel the time may be right for magick to emerge from its underground status--especially since the use of it may be the only thing that will save the Eighth Dominion from the destruction of the dragon.

Here's a brief preview excerpt from Dragonsfyre Book 2:

Lying angry and awake in the dark once again, listening to the sleeping sounds of the other cadets, Xaviero put two and two together as his Beloved came to him, gliding silently like a phantom.
Only now did he realize that she came to him in times of despair. His heart seized with dread as she neared him. He couldn’t bear to see more of his future self, chained to the dragon in that wooded ruin, not after the day he’d had. Yet he craved her presence with a force that left him trembling. Again she sat on his cot, reaching forward to brush a strand of hair from his eyes.
Between heart beats, he became that naked future version of himself, kneeling at the base of the statue, his arms pulled behind him, his wrists chained to the stone with cold cruelty.
He felt the gravel digging into his legs as he knelt in this ancient forest clearing, felt the coolness of the stone dragon against his shivering flesh. When he looked up into her gaze that saw him more truly than anyone else, he knew once again that she was meant for him. The realization that he must wait for her burst through his body like a geyser.
Xaviero heard himself moan in the midst of his vision, and he twisted his head back and forth, trying to wake himself out of it. Yet he came to at the feet of his commanding officer and the dormitory steward, both staring at him in the chill light of dawn.
Marched to the commander’s barracks, Xaviero stood and answered questions until his officer tired of his lies.
Xaviero heard the orders to report to their hand-to-hand combat master, his wounded pride forcing his feet to take the steps that would bring him to a rare penalty drill. An exacting cadet with a sense of impatience with the youthful high jinks of his peers, he’d helped to send a few of his fellows to a similar fate without so much as a moment’s hesitation, certain they’d deserved it.
As the sweat stung his eyes, his body rebelling with the effort to obey the master’s relentless commands, Xaviero wished he knew what to do with his magicke instead of spending so much time hiding it. Tumbling to the ground with a flattening blow, he picked himself up to face more, wishing he had a friend to stand in the shadows awaiting him once this was over, as all the other cadets had.
Thus far he was on his own, both with his visions and his years at the academy. He’d never encountered anyone who may have also had visions, though for magicke to be outlawed, at one time in the dominions there must have been practising adepts.
The very next night his Beloved walked towards him in the gloom. Xaviero lay on his side, his back to the other cadets, staring into the dark as his muscles and joints flared with pain.
When she appeared, Xaviero almost spoke aloud. No, he said in his mind. I can’t take any more of this.
Hush, my love, she answered him.
Xaviero pushed himself up with a wince, glancing around him in a panic. None of the other boys stirred.
His Beloved sat upon his cot as she always did. She reached up and wiped the trickling sweat from his face.
You will be asked to suffer for me, she said, hugging his head to her breast. Will you be brave for me? No matter what is asked of you?
Xaviero nodded, unable to speak, not even in his mind.
There’s something I need you to do, she said.
Nodding again, he gazed into her eyes that seemed to see into all his hidden desires.
When we meet, we must embark upon a course of action which the dominions have forbidden. Do you know of what I speak?
Yes, my lady, he finally managed.
Then find a teacher who will prepare us for that which awaits.
Xaviero came to, clutching his crumpled pillow as the cool dawn sent the shadows scurrying. At first stretching stiffly, he froze as his muscles seized in protest.
He remembered what his Beloved had asked of him. Gritting his teeth, Xaviero forced himself to move through the pain as though hacking his way through impassable hedgerows. It wasn’t easy, but through sheer force of will he got through the day with only the barest of signs that he suffered.
He saw the bent heads, noticed his fellow cadets whispering. He even saw the officers taking note of how quickly he’d apparently recovered from that which they knew their drill master could dish out.
You will be asked to suffer for me, his Beloved had warned.
All he’d done was to recover from a penalty drill more quickly than expected. Yet it was a simple thing to go from that to rumors of how he’d recovered, and then to accusations of unnatural means, especially when he had no friends at the academy to set the record straight at mess and during drill practise.
The only person to whom he’d ever felt truly close was his mother. At this late stage of the game, all the alliances had been forged amongst a group of boys who’d studied and trained together for years.
On a wearying day when those same two hostile cadets and one of the officers he admired most seemed to have joined forces to make him crack, an approaching carriage churning up dust in the road outside their gates made Xaviero look up from the demeaning work detail to which he’d been assigned.
Along with everyone else unlucky enough to be clearing the yard of manure in the chilly afternoon, Xaviero stopped to watch a green recruit disembark and gaze longingly after the carriage as it made its way back onto the road.
A calculating idea struck him as the boy looked around for some sort of welcome or direction. This boy was unclaimed by anyone, and Xaviero needed an ally. Dropping his shovel on the ground, he ambled over to the new arrival with as much of a smile as he could conjure up, not having much experience with this sort of thing.
“Looking for the officer on watch?” he asked.
The new boy nodded warily. He seemed a reasonable sort. For all Xaviero knew, he was a complete ass or an idiot, but he no longer had the luxury of picking a good match for himself. He needed a friend, and this boy would be it.

Copyright - Julia Phillips Smith - 2013



Thursday, October 11, 2012

Thursday Thirteen - 249 - 13 Questions For Trish Milburn, Author of Magick


I'm thrilled to have young adult paranormal author Trish Milburn here today for the second in my Spooky Stories Author series, running all month on Thursdays here at A Piece of My Mind--welcome, Trish!

1Many readers may know you as a contemporary romance author writing about rugged cowboys, firefighters, detectives and neighbors handy with renovations. When did your stories begin to take on supernatural elements?

I have always loved supernatural stories in what I read, watch on TV and in movies, and in what I write. It was just a timing thing.

I had been writing and trying to get published for 10 years when I hit a major funk. I was depressed, beginning to think that I wasn’t ever going to get published. So I had what I call my Summer of Buffy.

I literally sat on the couch and watched all seven seasons of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, all five seasons of Angel and the first season of Supernatural.

Yeah, baby.

In the midst of all that, I started getting the idea for the Coven books. At that time, it was just one book, but it eventually was revised into three. That book is what got me inspired to write and keep going. The next summer I sold my first book. While it wasn’t the first Coven book, WHITE WITCH (the first Coven book) was what kept me going.




2 – Tell us about your latest release, MAGICK.

This is the book where Jax figures out if she truly is a white witch and what that means for her, her friends and the evil witch covens she has fled. While the possibility for more books is there, this is the book where everything changes big time for Jax and the witch covens.

But the journey to the answers she needs isn’t without danger, fear and self-doubt.

3 – When you began this series, did you know that’s what you were writing?

No, as I mentioned above, this began as one self-contained book that was titled simply Coven. It won Romance Writers of America’s Golden Heart Award, the top award for unpublished romance fiction, in the Young Adult category in 2007.

Do you ever begin a story as a single title only to realize it’s really Book One?

Over time, the story and characters grew to cover three books.

4 – Did you do a lot of research into magic for this series, or did you go with your instincts while world-building?

I did some research, but a lot of what I have is totally made up. I have an entirely different mythology for witches, but it is still rooted in one of the most infamous periods in U.S. history, the Salem witch trials.

I visited Salem last year to do on-site research, and it’s a lovely little town. I worked some of the things I saw there into the second and third books (BANE and MAGICK), which are set in Salem. The first, WHITE WITCH, is set in a fictional small town in North Carolina in the beautiful northwest corner.




5 – When writing spooky material, do you ever give yourself shivers?

Not so much, which is surprising because I’m the world’s biggest chicken.

I tell you what does give me fraidy-cat syndrome though – watching The Walking Dead too late at night! I love that show, but I can’t watch it right before I go to bed.

6 –Did you read scary stories while growing up?

Oddly enough, no. I read a lot of those classic girl stories – Little House on the Prairie, Island of the Blue Dolphins, Julie of the Wolves. It wasn’t until later that I started reading paranormal things, although I’d always loved paranormal shows.

Speaking of Joss, you’ll get that I’m a fan because I mention him and his work in the Coven series. One of my secondary characters is a devoted Whedon fan with a vast collection of Whedon-inspired T-shirts.

7 –Did you watch spooky TV shows or films when you were young?

I grew up in the country where we only got three TV stations on a good day through an antenna, so my viewing was limited. Plus, my dad wasn’t a fan of such things, so that limited it even more.

I can remember being glued to the original V mini-series when I was young. I also really loved Star Trek reruns, sci-fi and westerns, so it’s no surprise that Firefly is my all-time favorite show because it mixed those two genres to Joss Whedon awesomeness.

Speaking of Joss, you’ll get that I’m a fan because I mention him and his work in the Coven series. One of my secondary characters is a devoted Whedon fan with a vast collection of Whedon-inspired T-shirts.But I did watch the V mini-series and Star Trek reruns.

8 –As a reader/viewer, do you prefer spooky/scary, or do you delve further into horror? How far do you go as a writer?

I don’t do hard-core horror. I’d say my writing is more spooky, but it can be dark.

After all, my heroine, Jax, had to watch her mother murdered by her coven because she wanted to leave the coven and live a different type of life. That’s pretty dark, but it’s not gory.

Same goes for my viewing. I’m a huge fan of the Underworld movies, so that’s more my preference than scary stuff that could really happen. You can’t pay me enough to see a slasher movie, no matter who is in it.

9 – If you had to name your top three supernatural creatures, what would they be?

Witch, vampire, werewolf

10 – Have you explored these character types in your fiction so far?

The witches in the Coven series, and I’ve sold a vampire book to Harlequin Nocturne. I don’t have a release date yet, but I’m hopeful it will be the beginning of a series in which I’ve created an entirely different backstory and world for vampires.

11 –If you could visit three hair-raising destinations, where would you go? Or perhaps you’ve already sampled a few…?

Salem isn’t scary if you’re walking around during the day, but I’ve got to imagine that there are some ghosts in a place that saw so much death.

Honestly, I don’t like to be scared in real life. See big chicken comment above. I like to limit it to what I read and watch, then go back to my nice safe real life where there are no spookies waiting to jump out at me.

12 –Are there some earthbound, everyday aspects of life that you find scary?

The idea of chemical or biological warfare scares the bejeebers out of me.

I think the things we see on the news every night are far scarier than anything I’ve ever read about in a book. This is weird for someone who worked for many years as a journalist, but I don’t typically watch the news.

It’s all bad and scary, and I’d just as soon not know about a lot of it. I do read the news each morning as I’m eating breakfast, but there’s something about the way that TV sensationalizes everything that makes it all much scarier.

I want to enjoy my life, not be scared all the time.

13 – Thanks for dropping by A Piece of My Mind, Trish! And for my readers, here's a treat:

A short excerpt from MAGICK, the final book in the Coven trilogy.




I wake not to flames but a windowless stone room. For an addled moment, I think I’m in the basement of the herb shop. A stab of pain hits me in the heart, and tears pool in my eyes. Fiona, the woman who’d found her way into my heart as a sort of surrogate grandmother, is gone. Dead. Killed by the man who should have killed me instead. I blink against the tears and look at my surroundings. The bare room isn’t the hidden repository of witchlore below Wiccan Good Herbs. It’s also not the cold, snow-covered ground where I lost consciousness.
     Where I killed Amos Barrow. Where I gave in to the darkness inside me. Barrow shot his gun at Keller, the boy I love, and I lost my last shred of control after fighting so hard to not let that happen.
     Fear shoots through me, stealing my breath. Keller. God, is he even alive? Did Barrow take everything from me? The urge to kill him all over again wells up inside me followed quickly by nausea.
     My stomach churns and I turn to the side to retch. When I’m finished, I can’t even lift my hand to wipe my mouth. I’m chained to a big, thick chair that reminds me of a medieval throne. My feet are as immovable as my hands, and panic surges to the surface. I try to draw on my power, but it’s not there.
Oh, God, what has happened to me? Where am I? More images settle into my memory, one of red-cloaked figures surrounding me just before I lost consciousness. The Bane. Had Sarah played me all along, making me think she was working with me until she and the other members of the Bane had the opportunity to take me out? Did they capture Egan, too? What about Toni, Rule and Adele? I swallow hard again when I think of Keller and wonder if my actions led to his death? I can’t live with that. Losing him, losing my friends would be so much worse than losing myself.

© - Trish Milburn

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