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  Contents

  Of Shadows and Blood

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  Chapter 1 The Old Friend

  Chapter 2 Maiden of Eliadel

  Chapter 3 The Wardis Clan

  Chapter 4 Bethrothed

  Chapter 5 Captured

  Chapter 6 Ruv and Others

  Chapter 7 Order of the Black Tree

  Chapter 8 The Road, The Woods, and Shadows

  Chapter 9 Purists

  Chapter 10 A Game of Coins

  Chapter 11 A Squeaking Friend

  Chapter 12 Unlikely Alliance

  Chapter 14 Of Fish and Foresight

  Chapter 15 Hands of Twilight

  Chapter 16 The Master Who Cares

  Chapter 17 The Gate of the Cell

  Chapter 18 Many Routes

  Chapter 19 The Path Taken

  Chapter 20 The Black Expanse

  Chapter 21 Ten Blades

  Chapter 22 Hour of Screams

  Chapter 23 Wretches and Spiders

  Chapter 24 Bloodwretch

  Chapter 25 Rage

  Chapter 26 No Mere Wizard

  Chapter 27 Alone

  Chapter 28 A Faithful Friend

  Author's Note

  Copyright

  Download Bonus for Readers!

  Of Shadows and Blood

  Shadow Elf Chronicles Book One

  J.T. Williams

  Copyright 2019

  If you would like to know about new releases, specials on other books, and get insider information before anyone else, head to my website and join my mailing list!

  www.Authorjtwilliams.com

  The World of the Dwemhar

  STORMBORN SAGA

  Stormborn

  Mage Soul

  Elf Bane

  Stormborn Saga Trilogy

  Ranger’s Fury (Ranger Trilogy #1)

  Black Moon (Ranger’s Revenge #2)

  Aieclo (Ranger’s Revenge #3)

  Epochs (Clockmaster’s Shroud #1)

  Shards of Etha (Clockmaster’s Shroud #2)

  Shadow Cry (Clockmaster’s Shroud #3)

  The Dark Compass (The Lost Captain #1)

  Eye of Storms (The Lost Captain #2)

  HALF-ELF CHRONICLES

  Half-Bloods Rising

  Seer of Lost Sands

  Shadow of the Orc Star

  Necromancer’s Curse

  Wrath of the Half-Elves

  The Last Dwemhar

  ROGUES OF MAGIC

  Rogues of Magic Trilogy

  LOST TALES OF THE REALMS

  Ranger’s Folly

  The Dwarven Guardian

  A Stranger’s Quest

  Wizard Trials

  The Thief’s Sin

  All books listed here are within the same world. For further information, please head to my website!

  Chapter 1

  The Old Friend

  I have long wondered of the price to reach a goal. What is truly worth giving one’s life in order to obtain. Every man or beast with wisdom beyond the primal instinct should have some knowledge of what I speak, but to give up your life for something beyond yourself is an act of true sacrifice.

  But it cannot be the same degree of meaning to give your life protecting those you love versus that of the ideals of a high king or some elf lord. Do you even have a choice when dying for a cause that you do not believe in or that by service, you're required to embrace? Perhaps, but by the time you face death, you have already committed to the life where one has no choice. I have made many decisions through my own time in the living realm up to this point, but for once, I move forward in my own life for myself. As dust settles from my time as an elf of Urlas, I look to what I seek to become in the future . . . yet all I see is shadow.

  A figure clad in a cloak of gray looked off the bow of an ancient ship. The waters in this region felt different to him. The air was not as cold as that from where he had come from. The sun had not been visible for some time. These were the Shadowlands, and of them, he had only heard stories of malice and darkness.

  He adjusted the scabbards of his daggers, resting his hand on the leather of the ornate hilts. He thought of his sister and brothers, what he had lost in the fires before. He was different then. A half-elf alone in the world, moving from place to place, searching and yearning for a path to those he cared for, and in the end, he had met two others who were just as alone as he. But his daggers were a reminder of what had been. In the ruinite blades of his homeland were the ashes of his sister, and he had struck a god in another life. Now cursed, he sought a cure he even wondered actually existed.

  "Kealin," a voice said behind him.

  Kealin turned and looked at Aeveam. She offered him a mug of tea.

  "The last of our stores," she said with a smile.

  "Damn tides kept us out of the straits for over a week," the elf at the helm said. "I had wanted to get here before their ceremonies began."

  Evurn was a shadow elf, a wizard at one point in his life, but his own history was a mystery to Kealin and even Aeveam, who had known him for much longer.

  But now, Evurn was the only hope Kealin had. His willingness to return to his old homeland spoke volumes of the respect Kealin had for him. But the shadow elf had become increasingly erratic while traveling from the far northern Glacial Seas, chasing the sunrise for many weeks.

  "We should have picked up more supplies in general," Aeveam said.

  "Just more to carry," Evurn said. "I want to leave the ship’s supplies barren. We will not be at sea for much longer after we stop at my old Master’s."

  "I thought you always were alone," Kealin said.

  Evurn raised his eyebrows and shook his head. "I was, for a while, but even I was not as skilled in magic as I needed. I learned from a true 'wizard' of the Shadowlands. A rarer form, if you can believe it. Most of my kind either lean toward blood or shadow magic, but this man was his own form of magic. Simpler yet powerful. But he never leaves his tower. We will make contact with him." Evurn looked down for a moment, and then his eyes traced over across the waters ahead. "I need to know what we return to."

  Aeveam was now sitting cross-legged, meditating on the bow of the ship. She was the child of a Dwemhar woman and a Rusis man, a blend of the races, giving her powers over elemental magic and potent psychic abilities. She meditated three times a day, at least, as Kealin had seen it.

  But he tried not to. He shivered suddenly, feeling an ache across his entire body.

  "You are feeling the coldness now?" Evurn asked.

  "Yes, it is like it starts within me, near my neck, and moves out throughout my arms and legs."

  Evurn nodded. "Such is as it begins. We will make a stop here and then head on to a shrine on the northern coast. Someone there can help us, another old friend. We will travel south from there, if the lands have not changed too much."

  Lightning struck a lone pillar of rock in the distance. Kealin noticed large jagged rocks like towers of stone rising out of the oceans on either side of them. They had finally entered the straits on the northern coast of the Shadowlands.

  Evurn sighed. "I have always wondered if my past would return to haunt me in the back of my mind. For nearly one hundred years, I have sworn never to return here, Kealin."

  "I am surprised you were willing," he said, sipping the last bit of his tea.

  The shadow elf nodded. “Now, being in these waters, so am I."

  Evurn moved the ship along the edge of a narrow rocky bit of land and then turned into a cove sheltered from the rougher seas of the strait. There were two other ships here, smaller and not at all in similarity of this one. But how could it be considering what ship they were upon. This was the Aela Sunrise, a vessel of the an
cient Dwemhar, once helmed by the Stormborn of the Glacial Seas, a unifying friend both Kealin and Evurn cared much for, but now, they were taking the first step to move away from their old lives.

  As they stepped onto the dark docks palely lit by orange lanterns, they prepared for what new chapter opened before them.

  Smoke rose from a burning basket near the water's edge, and a man lay burnt upon the rocks near the water.

  Aeveam summoned her spells, shifting fire and ice between her hands as Evurn moved over to the burnt body. Kealin kept his hands on his daggers but did not draw them. He sniffed the air and scanned the massive stone structure. The dark stone, wet from the ocean’s spray that struck the northern portion of the tower with the changing tides, gave no inkling of a hint that there was anyone even here.

  "Is it your friend?" Aeveam asked.

  "No, but it is likely his work. Come." He motioned to Aeveam. "And no magic. He's wise but a bit quick to launch a fireball into your chest." Evurn grinned. "Shadow elves are a bit crazed at times."

  "I had no idea," she teased.

  They began up a stairwell that curved around the coarse stone that made up the base of the tower. Of the three of them, he was the stranger. Evurn and Aeveam had known each other for many years. A playful banter, if it could be called that, was typical of the two of them. He was still trying to feel out the shadow elf. The little he knew of him told him that he should not ask too many questions. Even on several occasions journeying here from the Western lands, he had questioned too much of the shadow elf.

  "We of the East," Evurn would say, "do not care for speaking just to speak. Keep your questions to yourself, and let's just keep watch for dwarven pirates."

  Kealin had spent most of the journey doing just that, though there were no other vessels beyond the islands north of the Great Bay of the North. Now here, climbing well above the sea on a lone crag of sea rock, they had come to their first stop. Evurn knew this person, apparently, though Kealin did not know how, or even who this person was.

  They had come to an opening in the rock, a narrow alcove that appeared to have some furniture in it, though, open to the outside, it smelled just of salt and musty wood. As Evurn went in, Aeveam and Kealin stood outside.

  Evurn walked along the edge of the dark room and then smiled at them. "It is here I would rest, after my trials. It is strange to return here after so many years."

  "So, he is farther up, then?" Aeveam asked.

  Evurn nodded. "Yes, he is, and he is watching."

  Evurn motioned to a small blue crab sitting on the stones just outside the door. The crab snapped its pinchers as they continued up.

  "So, this is where you learned magic?" Aeveam asked.

  "Yes, more so, it is where I learned more. All shadow elves know some, but it is not our focus. Not unless we intentionally do so. He was one of my first masters; I was just a boy when I met him. My father told me he was older than almost all others of our race."

  Reaching a break in the stairwell, they came to a single wooden door with a blue jewel encrusted with salt centered in the blackness of the void between two pillars of stone fashioned to look like shells.

  Evurn tapped the jewel, and the door opened.

  If the room beneath could be described as musty and old, the interior of the tower was that of old parchment and a strange spice. A bit of smoke in the air smelled of musk.

  As Kealin and Aeveam stepped in, Evurn shut the door behind them and sighed.

  The room they were in was barren but had a few torches on the wall. They walked into the center, and Kealin noticed a stairwell along the edge of the tower that went up and down.

  "Which way?" Kealin asked.

  "Not down. Down is where his pet lives." Evurn shook his head with wide eyes. "I don't care for his pet. We go up. He likes to be where he can see the stars."

  Evurn led the way, taking the stairwell up to a void where two more small blue crabs waited for them.

  "I am here to see the master," Evurn said to the crab on the left.

  The crab did nothing.

  Kealin noticed a shimmering veil, a strange magic of twisting silver, blocking the doorway.

  "I will turn you into a stew, crab. Open the way."

  The crab did nothing.

  Evurn leaned down to the crab's level. "I dealt with you for twenty-two days. You attacked me every night, but I couldn't do anything except try to cast the same forsaken spell. Open the way."

  The crab sidestepped, grabbing a small stick from a pile next to him. It then returned to its original location, tapping the stone and pointing to Evurn.

  "I don't have it," Evurn said. "A bit has happened since my time here."

  The crab threw the stick at Evurn's face and then, with its kin, went to the top of the doorway. The shimmering veil vanished.

  "An old friend?" Aeveam asked.

  "I'm not sure I'd call that bastard a friend. He was a student of the master once, too. He was not so lucky in his time as a pupil."

  Evurn beckoned Kealin and Aeveam through the doorway first. Kealin glanced back to see another stick hit Evurn in the face.

  "Damn you!" Evurn said under his breath as he followed them. "I'd cook him, I really would, but he's essentially immortal now. One perk of being bound to a sea crab of the Wizard's Isle. If I had a pot, though, I'd test that immortality."

  They had come to a room with many stacks of books and even a few hanging crystals. Evurn weaved his way around them and led them to an open room with a single stone chair and a brilliant view of the night sky.

  Evurn seemed confused, glancing around and shaking his head. "Where is he?"

  "Where am I?" a voice said. "Where are you? Who do you bring here?"

  Evurn knelt immediately. Kealin and Aeveam followed suit, though neither of them had ever met this old friend of Evurn’s.

  "Master," Evurn said.

  "Master? I am no longer your master."

  Kealin could see two feet moving between them as they knelt. The man wore no boots; shells and tiny crabs covered his feet. He smelt of fish, a pronounced smell over that of the rest of the tower. Kealin heard smacking, like the man was eating.

  "You do come to bother me at the worst of times, and you bring quite the companions. I sense the one; she is of old blood, and so is the other elf, but I must ask, is she the one I heard whispers of many years ago, one of the island of Aieclo?"

  "She was," Evurn said.

  "Stand, all of you."

  Kealin looked up to see a man with a long black beard and pointy black eyelashes that curved out. His ears were longer than Kealin had ever seen on any elf. He wore only pants. He had a large tattoo across his stomach of a circular symbol, and was holding a bowl of some type of food. In the crux of his arm was a staff of shell with a large pearl at its tip. Though he had black hair, too, it was streaked with gray.

  The man nodded as he smacked his food. "Evurn of Mandurel, you come back to us at a time of strange coincidence. The one who wished to 'be alone' returns to his home." He looked over to Kealin and Aeveam, "I am the Wizard of the Sea Isle. Most know me not by any other name, but amongst us friends, I wish you to call me Radel. I taught this one the finer points of magic." He looked back to Evurn, taking another bite of what Kealin had figured out was some type of fish stew. "But if you're back here and without your staff, you need something." He shook his head. “The man who swore he would 'never pick up a blade and bring evil upon the world; I can't do this anymore' has come back to the Shadowlands. I told you that you would. I and Shellbreak."

  The crab from before came crawling across the floor and sat at Radel's feet.

  "Where did your friend go? Did you finally throw her off the tower? I told you to throw her off the tower." He paused for a moment. "Worthless crab. I take it you saw my visitor?"

  "What was left of them," Evurn said.

  "Yes, part of what has changed." The wizard nodded. "A priest of Mandurlaku. Ascenders, they're called. There were a few of them,
but that one in particular deserved nothing more than what he received."

  "Mandurlaku?" Evurn questioned immediately.

  "Yes, Mandurlaku. Mandurel is no longer the name of the great city. It has changed, as have most names of shadow origin. The world is one of allegiance to blood. Most Targus are dead, their armies shattered. A Great Seer now rules the city, and sacrifices are performed daily."

  "Then that means the Shadow Guard—" Evurn asked.

  "Leaderless, they are nothing now. A mere whisper from what they once were, and they are not of that name any longer, or even in the old city."

  "And?"

  Radel stood. "I know your fear. I told you to never leave, but you were insistent."

  "Dead?"

  "Worse." Standing from his seat, Radel went to a small altar between two candles and picked up a large box.

  "How could you allow this?" Evurn shouted.

  Radel turned, his eyes glowing white.

  "Do not speak to me as one of your underlings!" Radel growled.

  Kealin's hands went to his blades.

  "You were told the risks you took. You were a binding force in the world, but you threw that away. Did you think the seals were enough? The shrines have all but fallen across the lands! I have sat here on my lone island as priests have come to convert me, and when I refuse, they send more and more and more. They do not understand I am but a bastion of shadow magic surrounded by enemies, and I will not give ground! Take this and undo what you abandoned."

  Radel shoved the box he had picked up at Evurn.

  "I kept it safe as I said I would. You destroyed the vile wizard who was my brother, and for that, we all must be thankful to you. But do not blame me for what has happened."

  Evurn shook as he held the container. Kealin had never seen him as he appeared now. A single tear fell from his eye, but he then forced a strong sigh and took a deep breath.

  Radel nodded. "I am sorry, old friend. But all things left to the workings of the world will rot."

  Evurn was motionless, clutching the strange black box. Radel looked up at Aeveam and then to Kealin. He looked back to Aeveam.