Gathering Of The God-Touched (Book 4)

“Action-packed and thrilling, Garrick faces his greatest challenge yet in Gathering of the God-Touched.”

- Amy Sterling Casil

Nebula-nominated Author of Female Science Fiction Writer

The Saga of the God-Touched Mage includes:

Glamour of the God-Touched

Trail of the Torean

Target of the Orders

Gathering of the God-Touched

Pawn of the Planewalker

Changing of the Guard

Lord of the Freeborn

Lords of Existence

Other Work by Ron Collins:

Five Magics

Picasso’s Cat and Other Stories

See the PEBA on $25 a Day

Chasing the Setting Sun

Four Days in May

Links to these and more of Ron's work

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Copyright Information

Gathering of the God-Touched
Saga of the God-Touched Mage, Volume 4

© 2014 Ron Collins

All rights reserved.

 

 

Cover Art by
Rachel J. Carpenter

© 2014 Ron Collins

All rights reserved.

 

Cover Images

© Prometeus | Dreamstime.com - Strong Man Photo

© Warren1225 | Dreamstime.com - Dhaulagiri Himal Photo

 

 

This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. All rights reserved. This is a work of fiction. All incidents, dialog, and characters are products of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.

 

Skyfox Publishing

http://www.skyfoxpublishing.com

For Tim, Mike, Jackie, and Ken. And of course, for Lisa.

Table of Contents

Prologue

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Epilogue

Appendix

Acknowledgements

About Ron Collins

How You Can Help

Prologue

God’s Tower was a place of magic, a place of legend, a place of stark, windswept beauty.

Soon it would also be a place of war.

Alistair once told Garrick how Koradic and Lectodine, the two most powerful sorcerers of their time, met there in a council to argue over the control of magic. Those arguments, Alistair said, bore the weight of the schism that birthed the orders.

If Sunathri, Darien, and Garrick had their way, those factions would soon come to God’s Tower again, though for how long Garrick could only guess. It was telling about the nature of the human race, he thought, that the only force great enough to bring the Lectodinian and Koradictine orders together was their shared hatred of the independent mages of the Torean Freeborn.

Garrick thought of the tower often during the quiet hours of late evenings and early mornings. He thought about god-touched mages, and the open chamber inside the tower where that first caucus had been held. He thought about the devastation of Sjesko. He thought about blood and mayhem in the depths of Arderveer, and he knew the horror of those killing fields would pale in comparison to what was to come.

He thought about the life force that pooled inside him.

It was nearly balanced now.

As long as he kept himself busy he could almost forget the fact that this reservoir had come from Arianna and her family. As long as he could keep himself from remembering too much, he could continue on. But memories were everywhere. They came in aromas that suddenly overwhelmed him, in random images that flashed in his mind so boldly he had to stop what he was doing.

The hunger defined him now. It lay hidden inside, rising late at night to touch his dreams, biding its time. Waiting.

He was god-touched.

His life would ever be stable again.

And in those moments when things were at their quietest and his thoughts turned toward God’s Tower, he also thought about the other god-touched mages—those of the Lectodinian and Koradictine orders.

Did they, too, burn with this life force?

Did they carry this same blood lust?

Did they suffer the same way he suffered?

Chapter 1

It was early morning as Garrick watched Darien J’ravi, the commander’s son, climbed atop his horse. Darien's gaze flitted anxiously over the mages who had gathered around. The day promised to be cloudy, though it appeared the rain would stay away. It was early summertime, though, and the heat was already climbing. The ride would be a hot one.

To make matters worse, Darien wore black, befitting his new membership in the Freeborn house. His sleeveless shirt bared his arms and was tucked into a loose-fitting pair of trousers. His leather boots were polished. He had looped a short sword over one shoulder, a weapon that complemented the longer blade he had attached to a saddle loop.

“You don’t need to come with me,” he said to Garrick.

“You’re not getting rid of me that easily,” Garrick replied. “We’ve done nothing but make plans for three weeks now. I feel the need to actually go do something.”

Darien’s grin came from deep within a beard that had grown full. It made him look older.

“That, I understand,” he said.

“Beyond that, I may be able to add weight to the discussion with your father.”

Darien nodded, but said nothing.

There was no denying the plan hinged on Afarat J’ravi, Darien's father and Commander of the Dorfort guard. Everyone in the Freeborn camp knew it. Darien would ride to Dorfort, hoping to convince his father to throw the city’s defenses against the armies that the orders had already amassed.

Garrick could never fully understand what this mission meant to his friend, but he knew it would come at a cost. Having already lost one son, Afarat J’ravi had blocked Darien’s path into the guard. Rather than accept his father’s desire, Darien had run off. Though Garrick had traveled with Darien for months, he knew only that Darien's return to Dorfort as a leader of the Freeborn would carry baggage that he couldn’t even pretend to guess at. The pressure of soliciting his father’s help had to be gnawing at his friend’s thoughts.

“All right, then,” Darien finally said. “Let’s go.”

Garrick smiled, tugged on the cuff of one glove, and climbed onto his own horse. It was a brown charger that had been with the Freeborn for many months—it was a good steed, sturdy and dependable, but it felt odd to be without Kalomar.

He wore a blue shirt and a pair of riding breeches that were faded from weeks in the field. His gloves were thin and made of soft leather that fit tight to his hands. Sunathri had offered black garb of the Freeborn, but he refused. Symbols of color were the first vestiges of ownership, and he would not be owned further than he already was.

“Will!” Garrick called to the boy.

Will came to his side. His sunken eyes and unkempt hair told of fitful sleep.

Garrick wanted to talk to Will because the boy’s confidence and sense of joy had was flagging. Will knew something big was happening, even if he couldn’t figure out exactly what it was. Garrick was leaving him alone too long, and Will was missing Kalomar, too—even more than Garrick did. In the horse’s death, Will had lost a home. It was a feeling Garrick understood.

Garrick leaned over his steed’s neck. “I’m going into Dorfort with Darien.”

“Can I come along?” Will asked.

“No,” Garrick said. “But I’ll be back soon.”

“Promise?”

“Yes, I promise. I need you to look out for Suni. Help her where you can, all right?”

The boy drew a sigh and nodded as if giving himself strength.

“All right,” Will said. “I’ll look after Miss Suni for you.”

“I’m counting on you,” Garrick said, tousling the boy’s hair. Then Garrick sat up in his saddle and smiled. It
did
feel good to be doing something for a change.

“Come on, Darien, what are you waiting for?” he said.

Darien spurred his horse on, and the two headed for their meeting with Afarat J’ravi, Commander of the Dorfort guard, and Darien’s father.

It was time to gather their army.

Chapter 2

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