This hero of legend will encounter a challenge he has never faced before . . . ➱ Tempus Unbound an Epic Fantasy by Janet & Chris Morris Book Tour with Guest Post and giveaway
This hero of legend will encounter a challenge he has never faced before . . .
present-day New York City.
Tempus Unbound
Sacred Band Series Book 6
by Janet & Chris Morris
Genre: Epic Fantasy
Is this the Lemuria of antiquity, or of times to come? Once you've ridden the storm clouds of heaven from the edge of time, anything is possible. Demonic hordes threaten to destroy the very fabric of time itself. The fate of all humanity rests on the shoulders of Tempus the Black, Favorite of the Storm God. But even this hero of legend will encounter a challenge he has never faced before . . . present-day New York City.
**Tempus Unbound is Perseid Press’ featured title of November **
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Tempus Unbound – Excerpt
CUSTOM OF THE COUNTRY
Not one of the hundred pillows in Chiara’s
bedroom remained on her bed when the god finally had had enough of the woman
who ruled here as Lemuria’s Evening Star. She lay belly down on marble tiles in
a slick of oil and wine and surrounded by candles he was quenching, one by one,
with his fingers.
His short sword gleamed from the midst of the
mess, hair from her body and her head on its blade. He hadn’t done a protracted
ritual for the god in a very long time, and Lemuria’s rites rang as ancient and
primal as Enlil’s name.
Their tryst had included moments when fear
glazed her round, brown eyes, and moments when he felt certain the god
overestimated what Tempus’ human flesh could give and hers could accept.
Still, he’d never killed a woman
unintentionally, and although she might hurt when passion fled, now she merely
lazed, intoxicated, malleable, sated and unresisting in the middle of the
floor.
Once
he’d snuffed the last candle, she reached for a pillow and propped her chin
upon it so she could watch him more easily.
The big bed might have been easier on her, but
she and the god had done things by the book. Still on her belly with the pillow
under her jaw, she said, “You’ll really go with Rath and Mano into their horrid
world tomorrow?”
“You tell me.” He was hunting for his leathers
among her pillows.
“Stay
here. With me. We could recast the lot. You could be free of your god forever,
here. Stay, and you’ll learn of pleasures you never dreamed . . .”
“I’m a fighter, a soldier, a simple mercenary
who had the bad luck to fall in with an insatiable god. It’s been so long, I
wouldn’t know how to do anything else.”
“You could be the first not to succumb to
Lemuria’s legerdemain. Don’t cast a lot, and you’re safe here until you do. We
have strife close at hand, should you crave excitement: all the strife of many
lands. From here you can help all of humanity — ”
“You
must have mistaken me for a politician or a would-be king. I’m not the one to
chart any soul’s course. Not after what I did with mine.”
“What
do you want, then?”
And
Faun’s words came back to him: “Survival, that’s the thing.”
“I’m offering that. Tempus, you’re the gift of
heaven to me. I haven’t felt like this for — ”
“Don’t
tell me how long. I have a profound aversion to aged crones in perfect bodies.”
She
threw an errant pillow at him. Under it he spied his jerkin. He went to reclaim
it.
She grabbed his leg as he came close. “Take me
seriously.”
“I took
you as seriously as I’m able. For more than that, you’ll need a deity
incarnate.”
“So
you’re refusing me?”
“Dogs’ bellies, woman, what do you think we’ve
been doing here? You’ve had your ritual performed, punctiliously. Any other
woman I’ve known would be unconscious, or weeping in a corner, or begging me to
leave. What is it you think you haven’t had yet?”
“I’m
offering Lemuria, all its power, if you’ll not go wandering into places you
don’t belong.”
“Are
you so sure I don’t?”
“You haven’t the slightest idea what awaits you
in the world of Rath’s society. You’ll be destroyed there.”
“I’ve heard that before. One of those
adventurers said a certain person I’ve been searching for might be there — a
person from my own birthplace. If that’s so, I need to go.”
“Ash says that you’ll wreak unparalleled havoc
if you let those two trick you into serving their purposes.”
Ash. “Ash says whatever will secure his desired result. Which in this case
is probably nothing I’d agree with if I knew the specifics.” He pulled his
jerkin over his head, cinched on his weapons belt, and stooped to get the short
sword from the oily tiles.
“Again, Lord Tempus, renounce the proxy. Use
your lot to spend time in Lemuria, learning what you will. You can find a lost
soul from here without risk to you or anyone else.”
He took his sword in hand, stabbed a white lace
pillow with it, then used the pillow to wipe the hair and oil from the sword.
“Chiara, you do not fully comprehend. I have
finally shaken loose from all but the god’s hold on me. I’ve lived too long to
do nothing, day after day. Therefore I find a sortie into the unknown a welcome
diversion. This place is too quiet for my taste.”
Now she sat up and encircled her knees with her
arms. “Me, you mean. I am what you
don’t like.”
“I do not like doing the god’s bidding, if
that’s what you mean. But you’re mistaken in taking it personally. I am merely
not in the mood for the company of women.”
And
that was true, he knew. Faun had been an opportunity to assert himself, a
digression from the god’s plan, and no more. He needed mortal women like he
needed a rash or an infestation of fleas. He had finally freed his heart from
men and women both; the taint of the curse that had struck him loveless,
lifelong, was a habit too strong to break.
Going where he cared nothing about anyone would
suit him well enough. And the urge to move on was nearly overwhelming, now that
the god’s ritual was done.
The
Evening Star rose to her feet. Covered with oil, she was as magnificent as any
temple statue. He said, because her face said too much and, in all this talk,
he’d said too little: “If you like, teach me how to return here when I choose,
not because Enlil decrees it. When I’m done exploring, I’ll come this way . . .
” From here, he could go anywhere. Sandia, even.
“What you ask is not so simple,” said the
Evening Star, biting her lip. Yet her expression brightened. “Still, we shall
try.”
And so Chiara began tutoring him in the ways of
Lemuria, a process lasting until nearly sunup. While about it, she taught him
one thing he hadn’t expected: the Evening Star had more to give than the god
had taken, and tricks of seduction no rampaging Storm God had ever learned.
She also had a chamber in which she could call
up hot and cold rain and steam and dry heat with a touch.
Although he learned more than he wanted of
Lemuria while he listened, the thing he would most recall was sitting in that
dry, hot place with Chiara while she told him what it was like to care for
worlds she’d never see.
When she embraced him on her threshold, the sun
was rising, and he failed to realize why she said, “Be careful, bold Tempus.
Everything I told you, remember. And watch out for those you’ve met here.”
When he put his hand on the doorknob, he winced
as his skinned palm touched the metal, although the wound hadn’t hurt him
before now.
But he turned the knob and stepped resolutely
through the doorway that opened to his tug before he really looked at what
awaited on the other side.
The door blew out of his hand on a strong gust
and slammed shut behind him, but he hardly noticed.
In all his travels, in his wildest encounters
with sorcerers and demons from deeper hells, he’d never imagined such a sight
as the place before his eyes.
Confronted with such strangeness, he wished
he’d thought to bring his horse. But he hadn’t thought. The Trôs and all his
gear were back in Lemuria, behind a door he couldn’t open when he spun around
and tried.
And Aškelon was swirling there, part of the
gust that had ripped the door from his grasp, or at least the cause of it. The
dream lord glimmered, semitransparent, floating in midair. The towers of the
city behind him showed through his flesh.
Ash said, “Your meddling becomes dangerous,
Riddler. Fail here and die here, for all our sakes. For you can die here, if you try hard enough. In
this godless place, not even Enlil can save you. But don’t come to me to
protect you from this evil — not if you don’t leave well enough alone.”
Then Ash dissolved into his personal whirlwind,
leaving Tempus to wonder if what the entelechy of dream had said was true.
He squinted in air that stung his eyes, trying
to make sense of the jumble like rotting cliffs before him. And he called
aloud, tentatively, to the god inside his head. “Enlil?”
Thence came no answer.
He tried again. Only silence.
Enlil often failed to answer him these days.
Such silence from the Ravener signified nothing: not that Aškelon was correct
or that Enlil had not come here with him.
And if
Enlil had abandoned him? If what the dream lord said was true? So what? To die
a natural death in a strange land was something the very threat of which had
been denied him for centuries.
If Ash was worried enough to spend so much
energy on such a theatrical manifestation, then there was something here worth
sniffing out, more than met Tempus’ tearing eyes.
He crouched down where he stood. This place
stank. It was loud and its ground was slagged, as if the whole area had been
razed in a great battle. He looked up at the sky. Brown smoke tinged the
horizon as if a volcano belched nearby.
A volcano might account for the roaring in his
ears.
But only one thing would account for Aškelon’s
behavior: Cime lurked here, somewhere. That was clearly what Ash meant by
telling Tempus to leave well enough alone.
But where would she be?
And where were the two he’d met, Rath and Mano,
who’d said they’d see him in the morning?
Was this morning, here?
Again he looked at the sky. He couldn’t tell. The
overcast scudded too heavy.
Somewhere, something screamed.
What is
something unique/quirky about you?
We breed Morgan horses. We consult with Morgan breeders to
help them choose breeding combinations to achieve a desired result.
We are also song writers; Janet plays bass guitar and Chris
sings and plays guitar. We have an album on MCA records. Look for Christopher
Crosby Morris on Soundcloud or N1M.com
Can
you, for those who don't know you already, tell something about yourself and
how you became an author?
Janet wrote her first book in 1975 and Chris was the first
one to read and comment on it. Their marriage survived. A routine emerged where
Chris would read aloud all the new drafts and we would make edits on the spot.
After a few books Chris’ ideas became frequent enough that we agreed he should
have credit for writing, whereas before we had kept separate Janet’s
storytelling and Chris’ songwriting. The rest, as they say is history.
Who is your
hero and why?
Heraclitus of Ephesus, a pre-socratic philosopher, whose Cosmic
Fragments foreshadow our knowledge of reality and how to perceive it.
Among his precepts is the statement that change alone is unchanging. We’ve
worked Heraclitus’ fragments in here and there throughout our books.
Which of
your novels can you imagine being made into a movie?
All of them. We write cinematically, our books are vivid adventures
undertaken without knowing the destination. I, the Sun, The Sacred
Band, Outpassage and M.E.D.U.S.A. are
particularly suited to film. The Threshold Series is a feast of
opportunities for today’s special effects creators.
What
inspired you, to write Tempus Unbound?
For a long time,
we have imagined what it would be like to have Tempus in a modern setting. Here
in Tempus Unbound he is between volumes and we had a chance to send him
on an excellent adventure of his own. We bet you will recognize many features
of downtown Manhattan and have as much fun as we did as he confronts “modern”
bad guys and compares the big city to the places where we usually find him.
Convince us
why you feel Tempus Unbound is a must read.
Tempus had been evolving for
quite some time when we came up with this story to cast him against a different
background no less dangerous than his accustomed challenges. To make it worse
his true love, Cime, is reported missing by Askelon the dream lord who vies
with Tempus for her affection. Willful and arrogant, Cime leads Tempus on a
frightening chase requiring him to come to terms with things like cars and guns
and high fashion clothes. If you like your fantasy to stretch the envelope of
the genre, this tale will take you there in spades.
Who
designed your book covers?
Most of our covers, including Tempus Unbound,
are realized by Roy Mauritsen, a gifted graphic artist.
Advice to
writers?
As for advice to writers, here is all we know: write the
story you want to read. Start at the beginning, go to the end, and stop.
Seriously. From start to finish you must inhabit the construct in a manner that
makes the reader choose to continue; if you, as the writer, can’t feel what
it’s like being there, your readers can’t either. So close your eyes, look at
your feet where they are standing on the story’s ground; tell me what you see.
Tell me what you hear. Ask at the end of each paragraph ‘what happens next?’. If
you lose touch with it, wait until you’re back inside it. Tell the story that comes
to you, and from you, to me.
Best selling author Janet Morris began writing in 1976 and has since published more than 30 novels, many co-authored with her husband Chris Morris or others. Most of her fiction work has been in the fantasy and science fiction genres, although she has also written historical and other novels. Morris has written, contributed to, or edited several book-length works of non-fiction, as well as papers and articles on nonlethal weapons, developmental military technology and other defense and national security topics.
Christopher Crosby Morris (born 1946) is an American author of fiction and non-fiction, as well as a lyricist, musical composer, and singer-songwriter. He is married to author Janet Morris. He is a defense policy and strategy analyst and a principal in M2 Technologies, Inc. He writes primarily as Chris Morris, but occasionally uses pseudonyms.
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I am looking forward to reading this over the holiday break
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like an interesting story. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete