Vulture

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Authors: Rhiannon Paille

Tags: #juvenile fiction, #Legends; Myths; Fables, #Norse

BOOK: Vulture
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Table of Contents

VULTURE

Rhiannon Paille

How far would you go to betray everything you've ever known?

Kaliel didn't think second chances came with this much turmoil. Exiled from her home, surrounded by strangers and in love with a boy she barely recognizes, she can't take it. She has her best friend, a new mentor, and a chance to win the war against the Valtanyana, but it's all wrong. Desperate to salvage some semblance of her former life, she makes a deal that shatters everything.

* * *

Praise for Vulture

“The story line is exactly what I wanted it to be and, more importantly, I think it's exactly what it needed to be.
SURRENDER
and
JUSTICE
had a certain urgency to them that Krishani and Kaliel seemed to be misunderstanding but in
VULTURE
the weight of everything finally hits them and I'm going to be terribly clichéd and say that the whole story is just one huge roller coaster of despair and devastation. It's event after event of obstacles and war; like the first 2 books were the gradual build up and
VULTURE
is the crescendo. And the best part about it is that it's not even the final book in the series.”

— Robyn of Fairytales and
Folklore Book Blog

“The writing makes me feel like I am there in the scenes and I feel like I can connect to the characters. That is why the ending is so hard to stomach—it is like did that *really* just happen? I had to read it twice to make sure. I can’t say that I have any idea where Rhi is going to take this now, but what I can say is that I am dying to read the next one. I say this in the nicest way possible; Rhiannon Paille is the Queen of Cliffhangers.”

— Nichole of Rainy Days
Blue Skies Book Blog

* * *

Smashwords Edition – 2014

WordFire Press

www.wordfirePress.com

ISBN: 978-1-61475-189-2

Copyright © 2014 Rhiannon Paille

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written permission of the copyright holder, except where permitted by law. This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination, or, if real, used fictitiously.

This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

Cover design by Mae I Design

Interior Art by Linn Borsheim

Map by Christopher Boll

Book Design by RuneWright, LLC

www.RuneWright.com

Kevin J. Anderson & Rebecca Moesta, Publishers

Published by

WordFire Press, an imprint of

WordFire, Inc.

PO Box 1840

Monument, CO 80132

Electronic Version by Baen Books

www.baen.com

* * *

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I find it one hundred percent daunting to be writing acknowledgments again, for yet another book. It feels like only a few years ago I had ideas in my head but no words on the page. Now there’s cumulatively over three hundred thousand words on pages and I wrote them, rewote them, and shared them with you.

I’ve had some help over the years in case you haven’t noticed, and I feel like I must once again shout out to the people who have been with me from start. Natasha Heck, Sabina Grosse, and Rae Smith are BETA readers extraordinaire! Whenever I get stressed out they’re always there to help me come back to myself.

Melanie Chartier, and Robyn Leanne Smith who are my rockstar BETA readers. I’m so happy to have found you on this journey and so glad you loved my work as much as you did. I hope to keep impressing you.

Michelle Kampmeier, I feel lucky having broken you into the world of editing. Will never forget that while standing in line at Islands of Adventure you sent me this: “Holy shitting shit, girl. I’M DONE AND WHAT THE FUCK. All in the best way of course.” Which was then followed by: “I’m wrecked after that. I think I’ll make some lemonade and nap or something.” And then: “I just had to let you know that you killed me with the ending.”

And I also have to thank Jaidis Shaw for her lightning quick copy edits that didn’t make me want to gouge my eyes out. Seriously people, editing is hard.

The cover of course is courtesy of Regina Wamba of Mae I Design, who always amazes me with her cover creations. They are beyond perfect covers, this woman just has a touch of magic in her that turns everything to gold.

I also have to thank Linn Borsheim who I found on deviant art and pretty much coerced into doing all the art you see in this book. I loved her style and she’s pretty much just a lot of amazing! I can’t wait to show you more of her work!

And even though I’ve never met Cassandra Clare, a lot of this book is thanks to her, who inspired me to continue writing. I really thought I sucked until I read City of Bones and realized that we write similar styles (third person limited though our execution of the style is wildly different.) I started this book off with a lot more confidence than previous works, and if she ever reads this I hope I made her proud.

To the amazing bloggers in my life, Giselle of Xpresso Reads, the gang at Paranormal Reads, Evie Seo, Dennis Sharpe, and everyone else who has ever left me a review, THANK YOU. This wouldn’t happen without you!

* * *

0 - The Great Library

Nothing was ever really perfect.

Kemplan dangled from a rung on the ladder, high in the skies of the library. Stacks upon stacks of books stuffed into shelves in any manner lay around him. He scanned the worn etchings of symbols in search of the book he needed.

The last book.

The one about the Ferryman and the Flame, their original disastrous end. Specifically it was named after her, the Flame, but the book chronicled the chaos, burning, suffering. Nothing from that time survived. All of it combusted, life splattered into stars and patterns of spilled milk on an endless black sky.

Kemplan was supposed to burn it.

Of all the methods of destroying information, the only way to cleanse anything from the Great Library for certain was to burn it. The parchment should have burned, but its vile message refused to be snuffed from existence. It was destined to live on, continually threatening the very miracle of life hanging by threads.

Kemplan moved his hand over the spines, some of them detaching from the covers. His fingers splayed across a damaged book and when he removed his hand the spine fell into the abyss below him. The fireplace was so far away. All he had were thin ribbons of light from an artificial sun hanging over him.

He glanced at the book with the missing spine and pulled it off the shelf. He would have to mend it. There was needle and thread in a box under his leather chair. That would do the trick, stitch it up and all would be fine.

He turned the book over in his hands carefully, trying not to drop the front or back cover. He ran a finger through the dust and gasped. His foot faltered, he tripped and fell into the shadows, the book falling above him. It quickened past him and slammed on the floor. He cursed under his breath and waited for the collision. The fall shook his feeble body hard. He blinked and waited for his nerves to begin firing.

He was used to this incessant immortality, no fear of death, but longing for it. Time had passed in sparks since Tor ordered him to destroy the books about the Flames.

And he had.

He found every single one of them save for the last. He coughed and rolled onto his side, the book beside him pristine, no further damage. He rummaged for the spine and found it. Stretching across the creaky worn floorboards he pulled himself to his knees. Flickering light from somewhere unknown flashed across the cover of the book.

He recognized the title.

Cassareece.

It was another name he never wanted to hear again. Of the eleven Lords and Ladies of the Valtanyana, Cassareece was the one obsessed with the pursuit of perfection. He didn’t need to open the book to know the tale, it was still told to little elven children on Nazole and Talanisdir.

Cassareece was a vain woman with an obsessive heart. She wanted perfection, assassinated what was imperfect, and fought to perfect what was hopeless.

Sometimes an act of sainthood isn’t saintly at all, and soon Cassareece and her fetishes for pretty clothes, endless summers and beautiful architecture caught up with her. The people lashed out. No matter how much they slaved over her need for perfection, nothing was ever good enough.

Cassareece hunted them, ended their lives with her bare hands, silenced their cries with her own. She left their rotting carcasses to bleed in the streets of her peaceful kingdom.

Kemplan waddled over to the end table next to the leather chair and set the book on it. He wanted to burn it, but it wasn’t about the Flames. He settled into the chair and glanced at the salamanders. Their shapes flashed fast and furious, like fish jumping out of water, their sheer glittery scales caught by the glint of sunlight for a second before they splashed back into the pond. He picked up the needle and thread from the box under his chair, and began stitching the book together.

Cassareece wasn’t the worst of the Valtanyana, but she was deadly in her own way. He glanced at the high ceiling of the library, his thoughts still circling around the last book about the Flames, about her, The Amethyst Flame.

* * *

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