THE SORCERERS MARK
By
Ellen Ashe
© copyright May 2005, Ellen Ashe
Cover art by Amber Moon, © copyright May 2005
ISBN 1-58608-585-9
New Concepts Publishing
Lake Park, GA 31636
www.newconceptspublishing.com
This is a work of
fiction. All characters, events, and places are of the authors imagination and
not to be confused with fact. Any resemblance to living persons or events is
merely coincidence.
Prologue
He
awoke because he knew.
Buried in the
crypt beneath castle ruins, the darkness had robbed him of the passage of time.
He had slept, for hours, days, months, years, a century or more, how was he to
know? Water dripped down earthen walls searching for escape through tiny
cracks, while damp air had saturated his straw lair. This! This was not a
bedchamber for a powerful man, a feared sorcerer. This was a place of torture,
a prison, meant to keep his lips silent, eyes closed. Meant to keep him from
abusing the soft white flesh he craved to taste. Meant to rot the seed he was
meant to sow. This was his punishment for taking one chaste maiden too many,
for laying with her in a bed of satin and silk and for creating a child
believed to be a blight--soiled blood. There had been many children--in the
silence of recollection his ears filled with their cries--the pleading mothers,
the shouts of dishonored families. He had ignored it then, he did so now.
Except one, the last one--a woman abandoned, her brother angered to the point
of vengeful destruction--for his family had welcomed him into their home.
Welcomed him for he was the comrade to their son, a loyal friend, an honored
blood-brother. Wine had flowed to celebrate the victorious return from fields
of battle. Too much wine. Too many voices. A friend who had become an enemy.
That voice was the loudest still. How he loathed the sound.
But
he was awakening, ever so slowly.
He had had
little empathy for those he once ravished. Why should he? They came to him,
extolling his handsomeness, his eloquent speech, his fine clothes, inviting his
charm. They presented their bodies for the pleasures he bestowed. He would
never deny them the taste of passion. They were drawn to him, as moths to a
lanterns light, and if they were burned as a result, then this was not his
concern. He was a warrior and a warriors path was long and crooked and it took
him many places. He was a sorcerer and his pride had created superiority. He
was wise and powerful and meant to travel a solitary journey. They were mere
women. Yes, lovely, and soft, and ripe and welcoming, but limited in thought.
None could compare to him. None could outwit him and certainly none were worthy
to cast a hold on his attentions except for the duration of an embrace. Yes,
their wombs swelled as a result of the embrace. This was the fate they brought
upon themselves. How dare they cry once the foolishness of such acts produced
results. How dare they utter that his seed was worthless and common. How dare
they seek recompense. He was a warrior and a sorcerer, and his path was one he
would tread alone. He was a slave to no one except the one who resided within
his heart--his dark side--the one who spoke without scruples. This was what
made him great. Wyldelock Talan De Croft would not be lumbered with conscience.
To do so would mean ruin, limitation, infirmity and he harbored none of these.
And his darkness, the brutal warrior within, was shared with only one
other--his comrade--their bond secured, their talents extreme, their paths
similar. Only he deserved respect. In a blink of an eye one fateful night, when
the wine flowed too freely, the flush of victory too warming, that respect was
lost. An honored comrade became a vengeful enemy.
He
remembered because he was waking.
That fateful
night he had answered the flirtatious suggestion, followed her to her chamber,
and took the gift she offered. Her kiss was the sweetest, her sighs were the
longest and he had luxuriated in delicate femininity. Only beautiful women
could make him tremble so. She had been the most beautiful. But she was his
comrades sister, and a child had been conceived. He left her chamber,
harnessed his steed and rode away, following a crooked trail. She had been the
most beautiful. The memory of her lingered too long. He had wrestled with the
demon of confusion. Her brothers face had haunted him. It was then he traveled
the most treacherous of paths, to the Underworld, to sell his love for
immortality. Love had no place in a heart confused, a soul condemned, a
conscience pricked. But even in that wretched place he found no fulfillment.
Lost love translated to cracked foundation--an empire could not be built on
sand--and sand was slipping from beneath his feet. An enemy grew ever stronger.
He
remembered. He was awake.
The darkness
of lament filled his comrades soul. As the wine that flowed in celebration, it
bubbled over the rim, spilling on the pure white cloth of friendship, staining
it crimson. Soiled blood between them now. The darkness they shared, once a
power in battle, a power of alliance, a power of shared dominion, had grown
black. The inky depth was too much for a brother scorned. He succumbed to the
rot of hatred and jealousy and revenge. The object of such hatred was
Wyldelocks existence. Demons drank from the cup of communion that had once
been reserved for mortal lips. He fled from the one man, the only man that he
had loved, respected and honored. He fled, for the terror of revenge glowed
bright. So bright and harsh it was as fire, burning flesh, stinging eyes,
singeing hair. So relentless its quest that the only relief to be found was
deep within the earth, beneath the estate he had once called a refuge. In the
crypt he would not be pursued. In the crypt he was safe from the glowing eyes
of vengeance. But above him was uttered a threat. The walls crumbled, the
foundation shattered. One last voice, one last promise of retribution
regardless of the shield of time. One last memory before he fell into the straw
and slept a dreamless sleep.
But
not eternal sleep. For his vision was beginning to clear. Finally the ties were
breaking.
And
once more he caught the sweet fragrance of a woman meant for him.
He crouched on
all fours, stretching unused muscle, luxuriating to the sensation of impending
freedom. His naked body shivered within the dank air, eruptions of existence,
warm blood that still coursed through his veins. His hair had grown into a
matted mane. Fingernails curled like thin knives creating the claws that would
help him to scratch away the earth that made up his prison. His nostrils flared,
taking breath into limp lungs. He rasped, the vibration exercising impotent
vocal cords. As he rose from the damp straw he howled, long and loud, the
animal within finding its voice. Victory tasted sweet in his dry mouth. He was
alive!
And
he knew--another awaited him--within her breast he would find absolution.
He
would find her.
The scent had
wafted past his nostrils, even though the dampness of this place was
everywhere. The scent had fluttered through his being, pooling in his groin,
stiffening awareness. The scent renewed his potential. He reached down, touched
himself and cried out with the searing pain. He was forbidden to relieve the
pressure--the punishment had been cruel. Through the passage of time a harsh
plight remained. He was conscious, alive, on the move, but his masculinity had
been tampered with. His seed was dry.
In a scream of
agony he urinated into the accursed mound of straw that had been his bed for
the eons it took to wake. Never again would he rest here. The stinging flow of
water made certain of the fact. Finding the spring that gushed nearby, he wet
his lips, and then drank of the earths life-blood. Vitality was growing. He
felt his muscles tighten--his legs, arms, shoulders. Urgency was searing
through him. Her breath was his call. If he smelled it and awoke, so, too,
would his enemy.
He
knew. He understood what had to be done.
Punishment had
followed. Immoral transgressions had a price to be paid. Never again could he
take of flesh carelessly. Never again could he taste pure white maidenhood and
then abandon its results. Never again could he lust for the sake of lust. Now
there was only one, and in order to subdue the craving, his own flesh demanded
he had to find her, cradle her, cherish her, be a mate to her. Betrothed to
only one--this was the demand that had been left on him. For his body to
sustain life, his soul had to be cleansed. He had no choice but to hunt her
down. The fire could never be extinguished until that moment arrived. He would
never be whole until his lungs were filled with the sweetness of her virginity.
And to live, he must remain her loyal servant. She would sweep the cobwebs of
darkness from the corners of his soul. She was his savior. She was his chosen.
She
was out there. He knew it as well as he knew himself.
He lifted his
fists in one last outburst of fury, shaking them to the ruined ceiling above.
I am Wyldelock Talan De Croft. The stones beneath his bare feet began to
tremble and rightly so. I am alive. The shudders emanated up each leg,
growing in intensity. A noble stance, he held firm to the rocking of the stones
beneath, the dust that began to slither down the murky walls. My spirit
returns! he called, the words bouncing off the earthen cell, shattering rock.
I will live again.
The quake
opened the sky above his extended arms. Nothing made him flinch--not dirt or
dust or falling stone or the blur of lights across the black sky. With the
clean night air rushed the wash of restitution. Stars had been placed in the
heavens just for this happening. His power surged through his veins, and as his
nose filled with her perfume, his mind burned with obsession.
He
awoke because he knew.
His
cause would lead each step.
His
hunger would direct his path.
Wyldelock
Talan De Croft was reborn.