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Heir to a Lost Sun: A Caverns of Stelemia Novel




  Heir to a Lost Sun

  A CAVERNS OF STELEMIA NOVEL

  BOOK ONE

  Riley Morrison

  HEIR TO A LOST SUN

  By Riley Morrison

  © 2017 Riley Morrison All Rights Reserved. These include the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information, address the publisher at: mail@rileymorrisonauthor.com

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  Cover Design: Moonchildljilja at fantasybookdesign.com

  Edited By: Allison E Wright at wrightediting.com

  ISBN-13: 978-1976493447

  ISBN-10: 1976493447

  I greatly appreciate you taking the time to read my work. Please consider leaving a review or telling your friends about it, to help me spread the word. Thank you for supporting my work.

  Visit my website at rileymorrisonauthor.com

  My Face Book Page: @rileymorrisonauthor

  Where I will talk about book progress updates, more behind the scenes information and general discussion of things I like or talking to my fans!

  Read the notes at the back of the book for more information and a special offer for fans of the series!

  To my wife, Kristen and my son, Kaleb. I love you both very much. Also to my cats, who have asked to remain nameless to maintain their mission secrecy, as they plot to take over the world one dirty kitty litter at a time!

  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

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Epilogue

  About The Author

  Author Note

  SPECIAL OFFER

  EXCERPT FROM BOOK 2

  Want to keep in touch with Riley and receive free stuff and other insider info? Want the free prequel book Fall of a Lost Sun and learn more about the characters and the world?

  Sign up to my mailing list here!

  Prologue

  SEMIRA

  Semira watched her father emerge from the gaping black mouth of the limestone passage and wondered what he’d think if he knew his beloved daughter meant to kill him. Liana, Semira’s younger sister, followed him, her face haggard and dirty.

  Upon seeing Semira standing there in the dark, he passed his torch to Liana, then took something out of a metal case and held it up. It looked like a playing card in his hand—thin and metallic, with no discernible use. As her father stopped in front of her, Semira asked, “You’ve been gone a month... was it worth it?”

  He put the item back into its protective case. “Our visiondreams never told us what it does, though I’m confident once we learn what it is our journey will not have been for naught.”

  Semira wrapped her fingers around the glistening, wet stalagmite beside her and squeezed. Why did he have to mention the Dreams? He knew she hated talking about them. She was a scion like him, yet the dreams had never come to her.

  They have found it. The item must be destroyed, the voice in her head raged.

  The voice had first come to her after a terrible fever three years past. The best healers in Sunholm—Semira’s home village in the dangerous subterranean regions of the Nether—had not been able to cure it and had believed she would die. Somehow, she’d lived. And as she’d been recovering, the voice had begun to whisper. At first she’d mistaken it for her own thoughts, but it hadn’t been long before she’d realized it was something separate from her, a mysterious presence lurking in the dark recesses of her mind.

  “What’s with the frown?” her father asked.

  Semira let go of the stalagmite and wiped her hand on her pants. She’d not meant to let him see her bitterness. “I’m glad you’ve returned, Father.”

  He gave her a long look, then stepped forward and embraced her. “I know you’re upset at me for not taking you. It’s dangerous heading so deep into the Nether, and I didn’t want to endanger both my girls.”

  That wasn’t why she was angry and they both knew it. Semira didn’t have visiondreams, which meant she was an outsider in her own home. That was why he hadn’t taken her.

  Something caressed her soul. You are special, young one. You do not need the dreams. You will save us all.

  Her father pulled away and kissed her on the forehead. “I must leave you now and meet with the librarians so they can study the artifact. We’ll talk later.” He patted her on the head and took back his torch, then moved off toward Sunholm.

  Liana hugged her next and didn’t let go until Semira hugged back. “Are you alright?” Liana asked as she pulled away.

  Semira ground her teeth together and nodded.

  Look at Liana feigning sisterly love, Semira thought. As if she’d not come along and ruined Semira’s life. Semira had once been Father’s favorite... until Liana’d had her first visiondream. Oh, Father loved Semira still, but he was also disappointed in her, and his disappointment had eventually led her to hate him. Even worse, she couldn’t help but hate herself; she was different from the other scions, and they never let her forget it.

  “I had another vision last night,” Liana said. “It was of a woman with white hair and gray eyes. She stood on a jagged precipice above a lake of fire wearing glorious, shining white armor, and had a metallic bird perched on her shoulder. Broken human bodies lay all around her and hideous machine beasts were tearing them apart. It was horrible.” Liana stepped back a few paces. “The strangest thing of all was... she looked like you.”

  Semira frowned. “But I have red hair and blue eyes. How could I look like her?”

  “Her face, the way she moved... it was so like you.”

  “What do you think it means?”

  Liana shook her head. Like most visiondreams, its meaning was ambiguous.

  An armored hand slapped Semira on the shoulder, causing her to cower against the cave’s wall. Had someone learned of her plan?

  “Wrynric, you scared her,” Liana said.

  The old, bearded warrior laughed and pulled Semira to him, embracing her. She went rigid for a moment, before the familiar, safe feeling of his embrace soothed her. “I missed you,” she murmured into his chest, so soft only he could hear.

  Wrynric was like a second father to her, and had been the one she’d once turned to for comfort—until the voice in her head had taken on that role. These days, they rarely spoke; he was always either away on patrols or scouring the Nether with her father for strange artifacts. Like many who lived in Sunholm, Wrynric wasn’t a scion, but lived with them as part of the Covenant of the Lost Sun. Of all those she planned to kill, he’d be the hardest.

  They must all die, or they will destroy us all. The scar on her lower back burned with the voice’s rage. It had been there since she’d gotten sick and the voice had first some to her. Some
how, the voice was linked to the old wound, almost like-

  “I brought you something special,” Wrynric said, rummaging through a pocket. “I found it in the Dead City where we found the artifact.”

  The young Librarian, Erinie, came and stood next to him, nodding in greeting. Semira forced herself to be civil and nodded back. Neither of them liked the other, but Semira figured the least they could do was pretend they didn’t want to strangle one another.

  Wrynric put an egg-shaped object with faded markings on it in Semira’s hand. “Screw it open.”

  Semira rotated the top half of the object until it popped off, revealing an identically shaped object inside. It was a little smaller than the one around it, but had the same markings.

  “The next one opens too, and the next. They get smaller and smaller,” Liana said.

  Semira turned it over. “What is it?”

  Erinie grinned. “I think it’s a child’s toy.”

  Semira had to stop herself from throwing it into Erinie’s face. Closing the item, she put it in her pocket. It would be something to remember the old warrior by when he was dead.

  “Come on, we need to get to the library,” Wrynric said.

  Semira backed against the cave’s wall so they could get by. “I have something I must do first. I’ll see you all at sixteenth hour.”

  They said goodbye and headed toward Sunholm. Liana lingered to hug Semira again, then raced after them. Semira watched until they disappeared through the torch-lit metal gates. When she was certain they were not coming back, she spun on her heel and stormed away.

  She strode through two limestone chambers filled with sharp stalagmites and passed half a dozen side tunnels before finding the one she sought. The tunnel was devoid of torchlight and slick with moisture, but she was more sure footed than the first time she’d come there, following the directions of the voice in her head. Since then, she’d walked the tunnel dozens of times; today, she didn’t miss a single step.

  When Semira reached her destination, she waited. Minutes later, the scuff of a boot alerted her that the man in the darkness had arrived.

  His voice spoke softly in her ear, “Have they found it?”

  “Yes.”

  “Where are they taking it?”

  “To the library.”

  A harsh intake of breath came from somewhere behind her, but Semira stood motionless and unafraid.

  Tell them you will help them. They must retrieve the item and kill the scions. When they succeed, you will have saved us all.

  “I’ll help you.”

  “How will you help us, scion?”

  “Don’t call me that,” Semira snapped. “I’m no scion.”

  A brief pause. Then, “How will you help us?”

  “In three days’ time, I’ll kill the guards at the gate. When they’re dead, you can begin your attack.”

  “Three days?”

  “I need time...” She swallowed a lump in her throat. “To prepare.”

  “You would betray your own?”

  Semira saw red. “My own? They’re not my own. I’m not like any of them. I’m nothing to them.”

  “They love you, and you love them. You have lived with them your whole life.”

  They do not love you. They pity you and make fun of you behind your back. Your own mother disowned you.

  What the voice said was true. All of it.

  “I may have loved them once, but no longer.” Semira’s voice almost broke. “I’ll kill the guards, and you’ll attack. Retrieve the item, whatever it is, but leave my family to me.”

  The man was silent for so long she thought he’d left her there alone, but then he spoke. “If you do this, there will be no going back. Do you understand?”

  “I do. When they’re dead, I want to join you.”

  Semira heard laughter. Female laughter. She spun round. “Who’s here with you?”

  A torch burst to life, and Semira had to cover her eyes until they adjusted to the light. Around her stood two dozen black-clad figures, all wearing strange masks over their faces. They all looked female except for the man in front of her, who stood six feet tall and had two short swords sheathed at his waist. The man’s eyes were dark, fathomless pits as they stared out at her through the eye-slits of his mask.

  Semira licked her dry lips. “Who are you?”

  “You may know us from the old tales. We are those who hunted the machine worshipers and extinguished their Sacred Lights. They think us dead, but we only slumbered.”

  Semira studied him, then the women. “I know what you are. You’re the Knives of the Divine Dwaycar.”

  “Good girl. You may have a place among us, if we succeed.”

  You will succeed. You will stop the prophecy from coming to pass. You will save us all.

  THE BLOODY DAGGER TREMBLED in her hand. It had been so easy to sneak up on the two guards at the gate and slit their throats. They’d trusted her as one of their own, and now their blood dripped from her fingers. It shouldn’t have been so easy. They were the first people she’d ever killed, and she’d known them her whole life. It should’ve been the hardest thing she’d ever done... yet it hadn’t been.

  She stared at the growing pools of blood. What had she done?

  The Knives of Dwaycar emerged from the darkness at the edge of town, swords and javelins in hand. Semira waved to them from the guardhouse beside the open gate.

  The male Knife hurried over, then scanned the courtyard at the center of town. “Good work; the scions still sleep. Now stand back and let us do what must be done.”

  She grabbed his arm, forcing him to face her. “Remember to leave my family to me. They’re in the repository, helping the Librarians study the artifact.”

  He nodded once and she let him go. His hand made a sweeping gesture and as one, the female Knives charged through the gate. They began kicking in the doors of the nearest houses, ready to butcher those inside and set fire to their homes.

  As smoke and screams filled the air, Semira began to pace in and out of the gate. She longed to join in the bloodletting. These people, her scion kin, had tormented her all her life. They’d teased her, spat on her and called her names.

  Semira stormed back into the guardhouse and kicked one of the dead guards in the side, turning him over so his vacant eyes stared up at her. “You deserve this, all of you,” she shrieked, falling to her knees as great sobs racked her body. “You deserve this, you deserve this. You do.”

  Do not weep for them, my love. This is necessary. When the scions are dead and the device is destroyed, we will leave here and be as one forever.

  I’d like that.

  Semira dropped the dagger and studied her trembling hand. Already the blood on it had dried. Soon the slaughter would be over, and she would be able to wash her hands and forget what she’d done.

  Never forget. This is the day you saved us all.

  Semira screwed up her face. “I want to forget—their names, their faces... their screams.”

  The presence inside Semira’s mind stroked her soul, and a feeling of peace settled over her. You are a hero, the voice soothed. There are tens of thousands of people out there who will never know that you saved them by stopping the prophecy from coming to pass. But you and I will remember, as will your brethren who fight with us this day.

  She got back to her feet. I am a hero. I have saved us all. My kin got what they deserved.

  Remember that. Always.

  A black-clad woman emerged from the burning village, her eyes reflecting the flames. With a gloved hand, she pointed toward the repository. “The survivors have fled there. Come, Sister, and finish what you started.”

  Semira took the sword the woman offered and followed her toward the repository. The smell of burning flesh hung heavy in the air. It was time. Time to end the lives of all those she had once held dear. Father, Liana, her hateful mother and... her heart ached... beloved old Wrynric.

  If fate granted it, Semira would get to kill that vile,
self-important husk of a woman, Erinie too. How good it would feel to spit in the Librarian’s face and drive a sword into her guts.

  Semira walked among the dead and dying, the flames and blackened metal, almost oblivious to it all. Built into the side of the chamber wall, the repository loomed ahead, orange flames reflecting off its glass windows.

  The heat evaporated the last of Semira’s tears. She arrived at the repository door and paused to take a deep breath.

  When her lungs had filled with smoky air, she kicked the door and it flew open. A guard charged her, his spear-point aimed at her stomach. Hardly noticing him, she side-stepped his attack and cut open his belly as he went by.

  Countless hours of weapons training with Wrynric had served her well.

  Semira walked among the shelves of books and computers, nearing the large, golden globe forged into the shape of the Lost Sun. As she went past, she turned up her lip. The first verse of the Sacred Oath of the Covenant of the Lost Sun was written over it...

  We who are chosen to carry the lineage of the scions through the ages of the future untold must keep the bloodline pure, protect those who are of the blood and preserve the knowledge handed down to us from our ancestors.

  Semira had now broken that oath.

  Just like her father before her. Oath breaking must run in the family.

  Several of the female Knives fanned out around her, killing anyone unfortunate enough to have not fled to the upper floor. Few guards were around, which meant the attack had taken them by surprise.

  Liana gazed down at her from the railing on the second floor, and Semira dug her nails into the hilt of her sword. This was it. The torment would soon be over.

  Their father came to stand beside Liana, his face as pale as the husks who lived their lives forever in darkness. “Semira. My dear, sweet daughter. I prayed to the Lost Sun that this day would never come.”

  Semira stopped and pointed at him with the tip of her sword. “I’m here for the artifact. Give it to me.”

  He shook his head. “It’s not yours to take. Please don’t do this.”