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The Stormborn Saga
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Contents
The Stormborn Saga
Limited-Time Edition
For news, books, and bonus content
Part One: Of Eels and Dwarves
Part Two: An Ancient Secret
Part Three: Sunrise
Part Four: Valrin of the Sea
Part 1 Shadows of Old
Part 2 Mysterious Friend
Part 3 Underrealms
Part 4 The Black
Part 5 Sacred Bonding
Part 1 Wind Temple of Swia
Part 2 Songs of Harrodarr
Part 3 Ghosts
Part 4 For a Friend
Part 5 Slavers
Part 6 Realms
Forward to Ranger's Revenge
Ranger's Fury
Part One: Return to Taria
Part Two: Separate Paths
Part Three: Night Journey
Part Four: Saelmark
Part Five: Purified
Part Six: The Dwarven Problem
Part Seven: Fall of the Crown
Author Notes for Ranger's Fury
Black Moon
Part One: Heroes of Saelmark
Part Two: Night Journey
Part Three: Coast of Taria
Part Four: The Sleeping City
Part Five: The Rogue and The Rusis
Part Six: In the King's Bedchamber
Part Seven: Holding
Part Eight: Sunrise in Taria
Part Nine: The Dwemhar Answer
Part Ten: The Coward
Part Elven: Shadows of the Black Moon
Author Notes for Black Moon
Aieclo
Part One: Return to Swia
Part Two: The Observatory
Part Three: Titans
Part Four: Forest Folk
Part Five: Shadow Runner
Part Six: Northern Trek
Part Seven: The Black Reach
Part Eight: All the Lost Shadows
Part Nine: Silir
Part Ten: Rings
Part Elven: Between Ice and Fire
Part Twelve: Phantoms of the Mines
Part Thirteen: Scourge
Part Fourteen: The Ranger and the Captain
Forward to Echoes of Time
Epochs
Part One: Visions
Part Two: Clocks
Part Three: Under
Part Four: Embers Catching
Part Five: City of Fire
Part Six: Twilight Time
Part Seven: The Benevolent One
Part Eight: The Darkening
Part Nine: Escape
Part Ten: Asunder
Author Notes for Epochs
Shards of Etha
Part One: Dragon Master
Part Two: Lone Rusis
Part Three: Swamp
Part Four: Transformation
Part Five: Shadow Play
Part Six: Shroud of Marog
Part Seven: Eruption
Part Eight: Storms
Part Nine: Rocknests
Part Ten: A Failed Path
Part Eleven: Upon a Goddess Darkly
Part Twelve: Unto the Depths
Author notes for Shards of Etha
Shadow Cry
Part One: Requiem's Awakening
Part Two: Citadel of Fire and Ash
Part Three: The Crypt
Part Four: Rite of Rukrunro
Part Five: Lonesome Death
Part Six: The Dragon King
Part Seven: A Mother's Love
Part Eight: Of Spears and Coffee
Part Nine: Nexus
Part Ten: The Last Song of Aieclo
Part Eleven: Bloodlust
Part Twelve: Sea-Captain
For news, books, and bonus content
Part One: Black Scales
Part Two: The Lone Isle
Part Three: Wura's Game
Part Four: Legend of The Lost Captain
Note to Readers
Copyright
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For news, books, and bonus content
The Stormborn Saga
(Includes the Stormborn Saga, Ranger of Taria, and Echoes of Time trilogies)
(Updated and expanded special edition)
©2019 J.T. Williams
This special edition is only available during the 2019 Holiday season and will be removed from sale shortly afterward.
Congratulations on starting this epic adventure! I hope you enjoy the saga!
-J.T. Williams
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)
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 (Ranger’s Revenge Trilogy Prequel)
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!
Stormborn
Stormborn Saga Book One
J.T. Williams
Part One: Of Eels and Dwarves
It was an early morning in the southern Glacial Seas before the sun had risen over the white-capped waves, when to his own desires, a young boy pushed off his blanket and sat up.
He was a determined young man, and though the house was warm and a breakfast was an arm’s reach away, he had always felt alone. This was his home, as much as he could call it one. He had no mother and he had no father. He was Valrin, the orphan of eels, or so he had playfully been named now that he spent his mornings gathering them. His Aunt Tua looked after him. She wasn't his true aunt, but he was thankful for her. There were few warm arms to be had in the fishing village of Travaa, and there was even less warmth outside.
Valrin chewed on a fish cake with red berries and strapped up his boots. Donning a slightly bigger-than-needed coat, he slipped on his gloves and pushed open the door.
It was just now entering the months of fall in the southern lands, but the polar lights greeted him. One of his few friends in this desolate port town.
The town itself was built into the rocky shores that went up from a cove that was frequented by fishers in sour weather. The few houses that had sprouted up were generally guest homes used only during the fishing season.
As he went toward the water's edge, he checked two traps for eels. The fishers loved eels and he wasn't too sure why. He never had much luck fishing with them himself but perhaps it was different out at sea. He had never gone fishing on one of the massive ships and actually seen what they used them for. He always hoped to, but he never had a chance.
"Two," he said to himself. "That ought to get me a bit of coffee."
Coffee was a much sought-after substance that Aunt Tua loved. She had looked out for him for as long as h
e could remember, and she was actually part elven. It got her in trouble by some of the other fishers. The people of the Glacial Seas sought to keep to themselves and their own races. There were no other elves on the island but she was okay with that. It was strange, in a way, but her careful watch always made Valrin feel like something was different about him. For a while, the fishers said he was good luck. There was even a rumor he had washed ashore during a horrible storm and was chosen by the storm itself to live. Aunt Tua was never very specific on how he came to be.
For years, he heard the names "Storm Child” and “Ocean Soul," but he never felt offended by them. He loved the ocean and storms. As powerful as they could be they made him feel truly alive. As he grew older and now edged toward the years of being a man, by the standard, there were even more peculiar looks at him.
As the sun began to rise, he passed one of the fishers who was much older than the rest.
"Valrin, have you gotten any of your slimy bastards?"
He nodded. "Yes, sir, I do. Were you needing one?"
"Nope, but I have a feeling you will have some traders coming in. I'm going to go fish myself. There are dwarven vessels on the horizon. You know they always bring good wares."
Dwarves were the best for the oddities, and Valrin pranced up the hill to where he could see the other side of the island and the approaching ships. There were several in the outline of the orange sky. He quickly ran to his other traps and began to sack his catches. Running from one part of the island to the other, he went to every nook he’d hid his traps. The people of the village cared little to search for eels themselves. Besides, why do it when they could have a young boy like Valrin do it?
As he returned to his house, Aunt Tua looked him up and down.
"Now you're looking a mess this 'morn."
"I am. Thank you for the fish cakes. You know how much I love them."
"That I do. I was feeling a bit restless last night. I couldn't concentrate. I will be happy when the dark winter comes. Did the other fisher leave out like she said?"
"She did. Her boat is gone."
For the past few weeks, Valrin had spent his days with an elven minstrel fisher named Evia. It was a strange combination, a minstrel fisher, and she was a rare sight. A woman of younger years, and one who took a liking to Valrin.
"Vals," she would say, "you mustn't worry about what others do unless it is their actions that cause harm. Then you must deal with them."
Valrin remembered this and kept it in his mind. He had heard many sayings of the wise, but this one made sense to him more than any. He had seen many misgivings in the port. He had even seen men killed over money.
There was much evil in the world, and he could only do so much to not be saddened by it.
Though Aunt Tua would have rather he waited until they had settled in, it was clear the dwarven vessel he had seen at sunrise was approaching the wooden docks. He quickly carried his simple creatures to see what the dwarves would trade. He knew Aunt Tua wouldn't mind. She stayed indoors during the day and always told him she loved the night, and though it was strange to many, he understood it. As he came near the docks, he noticed this was no fishing ship as he had seen before.
It was a large ship, with green rails and massive pointed crossbows along its deck.
Many stocky dwarves stomped down a gangplank, and a few of them had blood on them.
There was one man who stood in front of them. Valrin didn't like the look of him. He seemed to like bones and was not afraid to shake some poor sea creature's skull at the fishers who had come to greet him.
"I say to you all," he began, "I am a simple dwarf. I only seek a dangerous man who has thus far evaded my capture. There is a ship. Its center mast is destroyed. It has a rough crew of the most dangerous types. Elves. Men. A woman who casts magic from her hands. We need your help. If you see this ship, if it makes port, with great care, simply cast the contents of this bag in a fire."
He handed the bag to one of the fishers.
"I will personally pay the entire island a sum of one thousand pieces of gold and supplies to last the winter tenfold for the capture of this crew."
"Tenfold?" the man taking the sack asked. "What could a crew do so much as to be worth this kind of reward?"
"Do not worry of it," the dwarf said. "Just know that their captain is dangerous and none of them can be trusted. I had some of my own betray me to him, and I would like to deal with the deserters."
The dwarf smiled, and the others with him laughed as they went back to their ships.
Valrin dropped his bag. The dwarves were already leaving.
The men talked among themselves of the vast reward they had been offered. Whoever these wanted people were, they would not be wanted for long.
Valrin was down for the rest of the day. The dwarves, though of a fleet of many ships, were not interested in trade, and it seemed no other ships would come in. Valrin sat on a bluff overlooking the harbor as the sunset began to fall.
"Aye, I know where the wind does blow,
Over icy waters blue,
Forever wandering the depths,
Of a sailor's life, I wish I knew.
Sunrise high and across the sky,
Sun sinks low and starlight shines.
A long night, winter cold and dark,
The polar lights of godly signs.
‘Ever a night, I think and wish,
For my parents to come from the sea,
Take me back and teach me why,
I only remember a stormy sky.”
Valrin closed his eyes and lay back. He looked up at the sky and thought of the island he had called home for so long. The winds blew over him, and he took a deep breath. He then heard something. Something that seemed frantic in nature.
He looked up to see that a ship was coming into the harbor but not very quickly at all. It had red sails, and the center mast was broken down the middle. Men used rows to move the ship onto the shore.
As night began to fall and the sun was just leaving the sky, Valrin jumped up and ran down the bluff to the shoreline.
He wondered if this was the ship. The vessel the dwarves searched for. He was one of many who were now on the shore. There were several crewmembers looking out, and several more looking behind them.
A tall man jumped to shore and immediately put his hands up at the rather rowdy group of islanders.
"I am Edanos of the free vessel Truest Bliss. We come with no arms drawn, seeking peace."
One of the fishers stepped forward. Valrin knew him as Guna. In his hand was the sack given to them by the dwarf from before.
"We had heard of a ship. Dwarves are lookin' for you."
The crew of the Truest Bliss seemed to become disgruntled. There was a shorter man next to Edanos who whispered up to him. A woman stood to his right and pointed to the tree line, and Edanos looked and seemed to nod in agreeance.
"People of this isle, I do not have the fortune of the dwarf captain, nor do I seek to buy your loyalty. I have a small supply of grain for payment to take one of your tall trees on the bluffs. We will need no assistance in harvesting it, and by morning, or sooner, we will be gone."
Guna drew a small blade, as did other fishers, while a vast majority lifted up an arrangement of spiked hoes and even a gigging stick.
"You will not be going anywhere. You will be staying, and we will have a happy winter courtesy of a dwarf's reward.”
The many crew aboard the ship drew back longbows. Valrin noticed they were elves. The shorter man grasped a hammer.
Is he a dwarf? Valrin wondered. He didn't seem to have an issue with this captain.
The woman beside Edanos lifted her hands, and a blast of fire landed just before Guna.
"We may be kind,” Edanos said, "but do not threaten my crew, fisher."
"Braei, send the man to the afterlife," the shorter man said. "Archers, prepare to release!"
About that moment, Aunt Tua pushed her way through the crowd.
&nbs
p; "What kind of nonsense is happening here?" she asked.
Guna pointed. "These are wanted men, and a good reward is wanted for their heads."
"And how is a wee man like you going to get that reward with several elven arrows in your chest? Not to mention that war hammer." She turned to the captain. "Your crew is welcome to my house, and ignore these rascals. They are only here for a season. It is just me and the boy Valrin here all the time.
Valrin joined her, and Edanos signaled his crew to stand down. Those fishers gathered seemed to do the same, except for Guna.
Edanos went to Aunt Tua and bowed. "Thank you. I assure you we will be here only as long as necessary."
The fishers all went their own way as the bulk of the ship’s crew disembarked. Guna shook his head, obviously disgruntled, but having lost his support, he, too, sank away.
Valrin watched as many elves stood on different parts of the ship. They were tirelessly watching the opening of the cove.
As a large group of the crew, including the one called Braei and the dwarf, went to harvest the tree, the captain was beckoned to Aunt Tua's house.
Valrin was amazed of the man. He had no hair on his face, a strange fact for those of the Glacial Seas. He wore a dark tunic with metal brooches and a curved sword.
"Mr. Edanos, will you sit and have some tea? I have a large stew I've been cooking and a store of dried meat. If it is not enough for your crew, my apologies. I didn't expect such an arrival this time of year."
"Your kindness is almost overbearing. I will gladly accept, and thank you for your words against the men outside."
She smiled. "They are too simple-minded to even be called men. They are pigs, in truth, and I'm happy when they leave. You have an attractive woman with you. I'd say watch her."
Edanos laughed. "Braei can well take care of herself in an unscrupulous crowd. I promise."
As Valrin stared at the captain, he looked away as he was noticed by Edanos' careful eyes.
"Do you live here, son?"
"I do."
"Your father a fisher?"
"I do not know him. My father and mother were lost to me. I came here in a storm."