Light of Demon - Bloodstone Trilogy - Book 1

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Light of Demon - Bloodstone Trilogy - Book 1 Page 1

by D. N. Leo




  LIGHT OF DEMON - BLOODSTONE TRILOGY - BOOK 1

  D.N. LEO

  CONTENTS

  BLOODSTONE TRILOGY

  Synopsis

  LIGHT OF DEMON - BLOODSTONE TRILOGY - BOOK 1

  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

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  BLOODSTONE TRILOGY

  CAEDMON - BONUS CHAPTER

  THUNDER CHILD & KEYMASTER - BONUS CHAPTER

  Exclusive Invitation

  About the Author

  Also by D.N. Leo

  Afterword

  BLOODSTONE TRILOGY

  BLOODSTONE TRILOGY

  by D.N Leo

  >> HOME PAGE <<

  Prequel: ASH OF SCORPIO

  Book 1: LIGHT OF DEMON

  Book 2: SHADOW OF ANGEL

  Book 3: SHADE OF DARKNESS

  SYNOPSIS

  Her mission is to serve and protect. That is, until she destroys.

  When people need protection and seek help from the top mage-operating private security agent in the city, Alyna is the person for the job. On the Future Earth, where governments no longer exist, the power belongs to those who are stronger—however strength may be defined.

  Caedmon is a commander with supernatural power and an army under his control. But when he travels to Future Earth on an unofficial mission, he is on his own. He could rely on Alyna for support, but what he wants might be exactly what she was built to destroy.

  Bloodstone is an urban fantasy trilogy full of action with unimaginable twists and turns, magic, love, science, and war.

  All books are available at http://dnleo.com.

  PART I

  LIGHT OF DEMON - BLOODSTONE TRILOGY - BOOK 1

  1

  N ew Earth - Distant future

  ALYNA TILTED her head to watch the two glowing bullets flying as if in slow motion toward the two men's heads.

  She had practiced her two-handed shooting skill for years but couldn't say she had ever perfected it. She would normally hit around ninety-five percent of the targets. But the remaining five percent bothered her.

  She holstered her two guns and punched a button on the wall. At the far end of the shooting range, the two dummy targets glowed in a neon green light, and her shooting score hovered in the air above the targets in a light green color.

  Her left-hand score was perfect, but her score from the right-hand gun wasn’t so good. She had missed the head by four inches. The floating screen printed all kinds of statistics—her accuracy, her track record, her probability of hitting the target if she changed her shooting position, pose, arm movement, and even pressure on the trigger. She ignored them all.

  A miss was a miss. There was nothing more to it.

  She jiggled her right shoulder and felt a slight tingling in her collarbone. Perhaps Pukak was right. Amaraq, the mage tribe she had grown up with and fought for, had won battles by the sheer strength of individuals, strength magnified by martial arts skills. Pukak disliked technology and weapons of mass destruction.

  But for Alyna, the ultimate aim of engaging in a fight was to win. And her simple philosophy for winning was to do whatever it took to get the win. As long as the end was morally justifiable, she needn’t worry about the means. She hadn’t been raised to be righteous. She had been raised to serve and protect Amaraq.

  Her ear pricked at a faint noise from outside her compartment. It sounded like someone or something was shuffling through the trash cans she knew were empty.

  Her compartment was one of a stack of six units right in the center of the city. It wasn’t too shabby, and she’d gotten it at an affordable price. When she’d decided to buy the compartment, the deciding factor had been the extra basement where she could build her shooting room.

  In two steps, she sneaked out the side door. A human-like shadow was bent over, shuffling through her neighbor’s trash can.

  “Hey!” she called out.

  The person jerked his head up and staggered a few steps back when he saw her. Then he turned around and dashed to a nearby alleyway.

  She raced after him. It wasn’t much of a race because she caught up with him in no time. She grabbed him by the collar, pulling him up after he tripped and fell. He was taller than she was, but apart from that, there wasn’t much in his body that would prevent her from breaking him in half with one swift move.

  He struggled in her grip. “Let me go!” he cried.

  “I saw you at the market,” she said.

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  She pushed his face into the fence with one hand and used the other to keep him still. “What’s your name?”

  “Don’t have one.”

  She slammed his face against the fence.

  “Ouch. Sam.”

  “Okay, Sam, I saw you picking pockets at the market—”

  “Hey, that’s none of your business.”

  “That’s right. Otherwise, you wouldn’t be standing here. I’ll break your neck if you go anywhere near my people.”

  “Who are your people?”

  “You don’t need to know. But I don’t want to see you near the trash cans at my compartment again.”

  “That’s what happens when I don’t pick pockets.”

  “How old are you?”

  “It’s none of your—” He looked at her raised eyebrow. “Nineteen.”

  “A few years late. But better late than never.”

  “Late for what?”

  “You can join Amaraq.”

  Sam stepped backward. “No way.” He waved his hand in the air dismissively. “I don’t want that.” Then he walked away.

  “If you don’t want it, why did you watch the open audition on the North Side? If you don’t want people to know, you either don’t do it, or you erase the trace properly. The door stamp is still on the nape of your neck.”

  “Damn it.” Sam stood the neck of his jacket up to cover the mark. “I’ll never make the entry comp. I’ll get killed.”

  “What?”

  “Not literally. But you know…” He flexed his skinny arm muscles, or lack thereof. “I’m not strong enough or big enough. I’ll get squashed like a bug.”

  Alyna pulled out a couple of credit tokens she had in her pocket. “Eating food from trash cans isn’t going to help you get bigger and stronger. One credit for tonight’s dinner. One for tomorrow’s breakfast. In the afternoon, I want to see you working at the door of the Amaraq North Side. I can give you some private training until I think you’re ready for the entry comp.”

  “Who are you?”

  “Alyna McCabe.”

  “You’re joking. You’re the Alyna McCabe?”

  “It’s the only name I have. I didn’t think I was famous.”

  “You should hear what they say at the fighting
ring.”

  “I’m too busy to listen to gossip. I’m not giving you these credits for free. I want them back in a week…with interest. So get working. I’ll be calling Amaraq North Side in the morning. They’ll be expecting you.”

  Sam looked at the shiny credit tokens in his palm. “Why are you helping me?”

  She looked him up and down then shrugged. “Why the hell not?”

  She turned, planning to head back to her shooting room, when her communicator buzzed.

  “Yes, Pukak.”

  “Alyna, I need you at the South Side. They found a body.”

  She lowered her voice, looking behind her to see if Sam had followed. He hadn’t. “You mean, the body?”

  “No, another one.”

  “I’ll be right there.” She hung up the communicator and saw dust whirling up into the air in the distance. It must have come from one of the factories outside the city. The dirt must be thick since she could see it from such a distance inside the transparent dome that protected the air inside the city.

  Amaraq was the strongest private security agency in the city. If they lost the city, they would have to be stationed on the outskirts, out there in in that whirling lump of dirt.

  2

  P olluted. That was the first impression Caedmon had when he stepped out of the portal to New Earth. They called it New Earth, but it wasn’t so much different than when he had been with Sedna in Greenland. He should have treasured every moment he’d had with her. He shook his head to escape his brooding mood. He couldn’t afford that right now.

  Focus. He had come to the future only to alter his past reality. One wrong move and he’d be stuck in this future oblivion forever.

  He could still feel the sensation of the heatwave from the explosion—the one that had robbed him of his family, and the multiverse of the precious traces to the Scorpio key.

  He had reminded himself every waking moment over the last month about the mission he had to fulfill by coming here. He was a commander with Silver Blood energy—a special source of energy that could destroy almost anything in its way. An important skill he had learned over the years was to control the energy so he could use its destructive power against those who deserved it. But he knew his disadvantage when coming to Earth from Eudaiz, a faraway universe, and being on his own.

  His father had approved of his mission but wouldn’t have approved of the way he had approached it. Thus, he had no military support. The injury his father had suffered from the explosion had limited his capacity to work for a few weeks, Eudaizian time. That means he’d have years on Earth to execute his plan.

  He stepped into a corporate transport, a hovering private car that was waiting for him. Inside, he was greeted by a computer screen that flashed a scanner beam at him and then faded away immediately once it recognized him.

  Apparently, asking for consent wasn’t a part of the identification process on New Earth. There was definitely room for system improvement, but he had no attachment to Earth, neither the old one nor the new one. And he had his own problem to deal with.

  He punched the green start button on the control panel. As the car automatically departed the station and drove itself, he settled next to the window to look outside. He saw nothing but red dirt. The multiversal teleport terminal must be quite a distance from where people lived.

  After a while, the transport crossed a transparent dome that covered what looked like a city. It was similar to London, New York, and other places he had been to when he’d visited Earth before. But he didn’t recognize any of the landmarks here, and the liquid map on the dashboard didn’t show the shape or size of any of the countries.

  He could have done a more thorough investigation of the place before he came, but he had been using a rather shady source of information to get what he needed, so he was in and out of the databank too quickly to obtain anything more than the bare essentials.

  There it was, the LeBlanc headquarters in the center of the city, in a small but exclusive area called Old Sydney. It was apparently a piece of what used to be Sydney, a city in Australia if his memory served him right. Some of the landmark’s architecture had been preserved and treated like rare pieces of art in a museum. It was quite charming.

  The floor-to-ceiling steel door slid open as he approached. He noted that the lightweight steel his father had invented when he was a kid had been used for the office door. It looked just like any other door, but the properties of this steel could protect the people inside from a multiversal war of the worst kind.

  A stunning woman approached him. “Mr. LeBlanc, welcome!”

  “Caedmon, please,” he said and glanced at his wrist unit, which by that point had scanned and identified the woman as his executive secretary. “It’s very nice to meet you, Leanne.”

  “It’s an honor to be at your service, Mr.—” She hesitated then smiled graciously. “Caedmon. The LeBlancs have never before sent a representative to this corner of the Earth.”

  “I’m happy to be here. We need to interact much more with our associated branches.”

  She gestured to a smaller steel door, and he guessed his office was inside. “I have arranged everything you need inside,” she said. “Your computer, your workstation. Also, food and beverages are there as well.”

  “Food and beverage?”

  “Oh, I don’t know about Mid-Land London, but eating the wrong foods here can have nasty consequences, especially for out-of-towners. If you need more, I’ve programmed your contacts. Just call for service, and whatever you need will be delivered to you. Please don’t wander around the city, especially in the unsavory areas, without a security escort.”

  “I can take care of myself.”

  “I’m more than sure you can, Caedmon. But it’s my top priority to make sure you are safe.”

  “You seem so tense. You’re making me feel unsafe already.”

  “Really? I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean to—”

  “Leanne, I’m just joking. Relax.”

  “I’ll try.” She smiled.

  “Okay, just to make you feel better, I promise not to head into any bad parts of the city, okay? So what places are at the top of that list?”

  “The North Side.”

  “All right, North Side it is.” He grinned at her and was pleased to see her relax a bit more. But then her shoulders tensed up, and her smile vanished. “Mr. Tann,” she whimpered and looked down.

  Caedmon turned around. An intimidating man with a hard face and a scar along his left jawline approached, reaching his hand out for a handshake.

  “I’m Lewis Tann.”

  Caedmon smiled. “The man in charge!”

  Lewis smiled. “Only when you’re not here. To what do we owe a visit from the Mid-Land London central, Mr. LeBlanc?”

  “Don’t worry, I won’t be in your way for long. I guess that’s where my temporary office is?” He pointed at the steel door.

  “Sure is. As permanent or temporary as you’d like it.” Lewis gestured for Caedmon to go ahead of him.

  Caedmon turned and grinned at Leanne. “I promise I’ll only eat the food you recommend.”

  Leanne smiled then looked down when her eyes fell on Lewis.

  On the way into the office, Caedmon quickly scanned the area for the layout, entry and exit points, and number of staff.

  “I trust you received the memos, Mr. Tann?”

  “Yes, and I still don’t understand them. The business here is doing well. Why do we need to take on Amaraq’s burdens?”

  “It’s called a business extension.”

  “Look, Caedmon, private security business isn’t our thing. We’re not into fist fights and gang business.”

  “But it can be lucrative if done the right way. That is, using advanced technology and weapons street gangs can’t afford. And it’s the LeBlanc’s profits we’re talking about here.”

  “Yes, but it’s not a safe business.”

  “Are you suggesting we should start selling flowers?
r />   “LeBlanc Pharmaceuticals is our strongest business line. Why deviate from that?”

  Caedmon smiled. “You obviously haven’t gotten the full picture of the takeover proposal, Mr. Tann. Amaraq has two main businesses, and the private security business is a by-product for me. I am interested in their natural medicine business, which is bankrupting them at the moment.”

  “How do you know that?”

  “Because I’m from Mid-Land London. You don’t have anything to worry about, Mr. Tann. If I turn Amaraq’s natural medicine business into a success, you’ll keep your job doing whatever you do here.”

  Mr. Tann nodded.

  “I’ll need to survey the area along with the clinics, so I’m going to take a walk around. Where do you suggest I look first, Mr. Tann?”

  Lewis Tann smiled. “The North Side.”

 

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