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Sacrifice of Ericc
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Altered Creatures Epic Fantasy Adventures
Book 2 of the Thorik Dain Series
Sacrifice of Ericc
Historical Date 4.0650.0410
(4th Age, 650th Year, 4th Month, 10th Day)
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Copyright © 2009 by Anthony G. Wedgeworth
Published by Anthony G. Wedgeworth
Artwork by Frederick L. Wedgeworth
ISBN: 978-0-9859159-3-3
Library of Congress Control Number: 2009900346
Altered Creatures Epic Fantasy Adventures
Historical Date 4.0650.0410
Thorik Dain Series, Book 2, Revision 1.2, Sacrifice of Ericc
www.AlteredCreatures.com
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
No thrashers or Chuttlebeast were harmed in the making of this book.
Dedication:
For everyone, young and old, who still finds time to read a book in an age of electronic communications.
Acknowledgments:
Everyone who took the time to read my manuscript and help me work out the details and issues. These include JoAnn Cegon, Alexander Wedgeworth, Tami Wedgeworth, Jonathan O’Brien, Pat Mulhern, Josh Crawford, Author Fred Waiss, freelance journalist Lyle Ernst, and my dear friend & business mentor Dennis Shurson.
Prologue
Thorik’s Log: April 9th of the 650th year.
After months of being stranded on an island after our boat crashed, we have been rescued by a captain of a seaworthy vessel. And yet I sit here on my seventeenth birthday filled with remorse over the death of my friend Ambrosius. But with the captain’s commitment to help find Ericc, I plan to tell Ambrosius’ heir of his father’s fate in an effort to prevent the boy from succumbing to the same end. The prophecy of his sacrifice on June 21st must be avoided, for he is the last E’rudite who can stand up against Darkmere.
Chapter 1
The Prophecy
“Your survival leads to my death,” Lord Bredgin said as he cautiously approached Ericc. “I am here to reverse this dilemma and pen a new future in your stead.”
Colors faded to gray shadows as the young lord muted the spectrum of light to his liking of shades of black. Light and darkness carried great power, which affected all living things. Light provided life as well as heat when focused intensely. Dark provided coolness, and if used properly it wielded death.
Ericc shuffled his feet backward, staying just outside of the grayness which loomed around Lord Bredgin. “Who are you?” Ericc demanded as his foot felt the icy cold of the impending shadow. Refusing to turn and run, the teenage boy defied the stranger’s threats while keeping a safe distance.
“I am the one foretold to fall from the strike of your blade.” A shadowy sphere extended from Bredgin’s body, as his presence muted light and colors several yards in every direction. Flowers wilted and clay pots cracked as he followed Ericc down the street in the center of town, in the middle of the day. People who failed to heed the ominous warning screamed from the pain given once they fell within his vicinity.
Southwind locals ran from the cloud of darkness, after witnessing the life-sucking effect on those who had accidentally strayed into its path.
Ericc refused to turn his back to the young bald man, for it was best to keep him within his sights. “I have no quarrel with you. Why would I strike you down, aside from defending myself from your hostile actions?”
“It’s not a matter of why. It’s a matter of when, which haunts my days. Ever since I was a child, my father has been training me to prevent you from ending my life. For years I have searched for you in an effort to end this curse against me. Today is the day I have long awaited to change the future.”
Ericc turned down an alley to protect the residents from the man’s wrath, as the young lord left the main street to follow.
The red brick walls turned black and the mortar cracked and crumbled as Bredgin smoothly entered the back alley. Screams from the far side of the walls could be heard as the darkness penetrated the interior of the buildings.
“Why are you doing this?” Ericc asked as he listened to the painful cries for help. “How can you possibly convict me of a crime I have yet to even consider performing?”
“Don’t play this game with me,” Bredgin shouted. “You have the powers of the E’rudite. You are the son of the eldest twin, of the brothers of war.” He followed Ericc out of the alley and into a stable. “You are the one talked about by the oracles. Two paths lay before you, one reveals your murder of me, and the other involves your sacrifice at Surod. I have chosen the latter one.”
Darkness rushed from Lord Bredgin toward Ericc in an attack to incapacitate him.
Ericc jumped out of the way, rolling into one of the animal stalls for safety.
The animals howled in pain as their bodies took the full load of the absence of light. More than just darkness, it drained the living flesh and dried up their bones while consuming all warmth from their body.
Ericc watched as the tan hay on the floor took on a sour gray. Pushing his back up against the far corner, he watched the darkness increase with each loud step of his attacker. Wooden floorboards seem to age decades before his eyes, and ropes lost their strength, dropping tools and a lantern onto the floor. The sound was even distant as the darkness subdued all aspects in its evasive assault.
Lord Bredgin reached the stall and prepared his final attack on his trapped victim, only to find the stall empty with no options for Ericc’s escape. And yet he had done just that.
Furious, Lord Bredgin yelled with rage, extending his grayness over two city blocks, without care of whom or what he decimated.
Chapter 2
High Seas