The Sorcerer's Ring (Book 1)
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The Sorcerer's Ring
Seven Sorcerers Saga #1
By
J St. Clair
Copyright © 2015 by J St. Clair
All rights reserved. This story or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, objects and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales are coincidental and should not be taken seriously.
Now Available for Preorder:
The Sorcerer's Dragon (Seven Sorcerers Saga, Book 2)
Table of Contents:
Prologue
Chapter 1 – Remi
Chapter 2 – Daydreams
Chapter 3 – Paragon/Paradise
Chapter 4 – Mind over Matter
Chapter 5 – Goodbye to the Old Life
Chapter 6 – Don’t Get Burned
Chapter 7 – Marked
Chapter 8 – Disturbance of the Peace
Chapter 9 – Who’s the Predator and Who’s the Prey?
Chapter 10 – A Thrashing
Chapter 11 – Things Just Might Work Out
Chapter 12 – Smokescreen
Chapter 13 – To What Do I Owe The Pleasure?
Chapter 14 – His Name Starts With a D
Chapter 15 – Pregame
Chapter 16 – The Party Gets Started
Chapter 17 – An Unsettling Reunion
Chapter 18 – Is She Worth It?
Chapter 19 – Overwhelmed
Chapter 20 – Impossible
Chapter 21 – Bed
Dear Sages,
Don’t let the new title fool you. This IS the book you have been waiting for. This IS the Last of the Sages 7. As I was writing about the awesome protagonist you’re about to meet (Remi) and her adventures, I realized just how much Bastion’s actions in the last novel changed things. In a sense, this is a whole new world (or worlds, if you will) and things just aren’t the same anymore. After completing this novel, I thought to myself…this certainly is different than the other Sage trilogies. Kind of like how Bastion’s trilogy was different than James’. It’s not a bad thing. In fact, I loved writing about Remi.
It’s just different.
And so I got to thinking about what I wrote, and what you as the readers want and I tried to come up with a balance between the two.
As always, I want to keep the series fresh, and that means introducing new and exciting main characters, bringing on different perspectives, new friends and enemies, etc.
But that doesn’t mean people don’t love or outright prefer the Sages of Yesterday. For example, I have been getting a TON of emails asking about their favorite Sages and when they’ll see them again. Don’t even get me started on the lashing I took when I killed James. Goodness. People weren’t too happy about that.
In a sense, we’ve hit another crossroads, and so…after a lot of consideration, this is what NATURALLY happened. Remi’s story is now kicking off a brand new series while still incorporating all that has happened in the prior Sage books. This was the book I’ve wanted to write all along, kind of like how Bastion was the major force driving his trilogy. However, the people have spoken, and say they want to see their favorite Sages in new major stories.
So…here’s what we’re looking at now:
The Sorcerer’s Ring (Book #1 of the Seven Sorcerers Saga)
AND
Rise of the Sages (Book #7 of the Sage Saga)
What you have pre-ordered IS Sages 7 through and through, but it won’t be called that from here on out. Instead, the upcoming Sages 7 (which you will see listed on Amazon for Preorder) is the one that’s ALL about your favorite Sages and so will #8 and #9 and so on. No new protagonists taking the forefront. It’s all about James, Kyran, Chloe, Arimus, Bastion, Lily, and all the other Sages that died fighting the good fight. Having a story focused on them is great because there’s no awkward intro phase. We can just get right to the main entrée of your four course meal. Oh, and you’re going to love the villain in that story. I promise.
Meanwhile, Remi and other future protagonists will continue the series through the Seven Sorcerers Saga. While there will be crossovers and you will see the Sages pop up in her world here and there, for the most part, the story will be all about her, which is how I think it should be.
Bottom line is, I want to make you happy above all else for you are what keeps this series going and I’m eternally grateful. That’s why I want to further sweeten the pot. If you provide your email to me at: juliusstclair@yahoo.com, there will be no need to preorder the Sages 7 (with the main focus on James and the other Sages), because I will give it to you for FREE THE DAY IT COMES OUT. Just type in the body of the email: PREORDER FREE COPY.
Yep. FREE. I might even throw in some other awesome stuff as well and I’ll keep you tuned in on that.
In the meantime, I hope you’ll love what’s coming. Instead of two major novels in the “Sages Universe,” you’ll get two. One novel all about the new, and one novel all about the old, and I can’t even begin to tell you what other craziness I have up my sleeve. Just like how Bastion introduced a new age of separate but connected trilogies, it seems that Remi will issue in an age of separate but connected SERIES.
I’m pretty excited, and I hope you are too. So sit back and enjoy.
- J St. Clair
Prologue:
Twenty years ago
The Great Collision occurred.
Between Paradise (Heaven),
Oblivion (Hell),
And Terra (Earth).
Once thought to be spiritual planes,
It was discovered that Paradise and Oblivion were actually very physical worlds.
Now they are connected
And all the people
Are sharing the same atmosphere, but not the same ideals.
War is coming.
And sensing the great conflict ahead,
both Paradise and Oblivion seek warriors.
Paragon has their private army: supernatural soldiers from Terra known as Sages
But they are not enough.
And the only ones who can truly turn the tides
Are still in hiding.
The Seven Sorcerers—ancient warriors that are revered as gods—wait in the shadows,
Uncertain of which side to take.
Few are prepared for the battles ahead.
But one has already been fighting for her life.
It begins with a young girl…
Chapter 1 – Remi
She never got complacent looking up at the stars.
And it was not because of the mysteries they were known to possess. How they only revealed a miniscule amount of their true brilliance and potential from afar, or how the light that the planet enjoyed was years old and no one has truly seen their current state.
No that wasn’t it. That wasn’t why she gazed at them.
It was because of how ordinary and insignificant they now were since the worlds connected.
Remi Fonteyn took another deep breath, and tried to ignore the burning in her lungs. She could fight the frost a little longer. But it wasn’t worth it.
Paragon—or what used to be called Paradise—was now before her and on full display, as if it was her own private show. As she sat on the edge of the cliff and stared out beyond the grass and flower filled canyon, she could see the fears and hopes of her people manifested before her eyes.
Every day when they woke up, the concepts tugged at their hearts.
Tha
t Paradise and Oblivion/Paragon and Cimmerian—were not as eternal as they previously believed.
“REMI!” a sharp yet sweet voice called out to her from behind. Remi wrapped the wool blanket tighter around her and adjusted her seat in the hardened and ice kissed grass, just enough to turn her head. Olivia was marching up the cliff with clenched fists, huffing and puffing out tufts of chilled breath. She must have come in a hurry for she wasn’t wearing her poncho.
“Oh, hey!” Remi laughed, waving her friend over. “I was wondering when you would arrive.”
“When I would arrive?” Olivia scoffed. “Sitting there and acting like you invited me out here…what are you doing? You’re going to get sick again.”
“Oh, it’s not that bad,” Remi huffed, turning back around to face the dancing lights. They were only wisps of Paradise, but they were enough to make her sneak out of her house whenever she had the strength. Waves of baby blue, neon green and violent red swept across the night sky as if the colors were made of water and someone was moping them up. Pinks and yellows swung back and forth as if they were listening to music only known to them, and the violets and oranges remained still and steady, as if waiting for a partner to invite them to the dance floor. The lights only appeared on a clear and cloudless night so she wasn’t going to miss the show now. Not for anything.
“You’re going to get sick again,” Olivia repeated, plopping down next to Remi. “You do that, and there’s no way you’re going on the next raid.”
“Maybe I don’t want to go on the next raid,” she muttered.
“Then what’s the point of all that training I see you doing? It’s not for your health.”
“I’d rather not talk about my health while we’re out here.”
“I just worry.”
“If I’m okay, then you should be too,” Remi replied, still facing the light show. “It’s my life after all.”
“I don’t know what I would do without you though.” Remi faced her friend and saw the grief in her eyes. She didn’t look like the Olivia she knew. That Olivia was more optimistic and kind. She was beautiful and had the voice and physique of a pixie. She was tiny in stature but strong in spirit. The Olivia before her now was on the verge of tears, and her face was worn and sunken low, as if her skin was being pulled at by tiny hooks. It only took a few seconds for Remi to realize the truth—her friend had already begun the mourning process.
“Stop it,” Remi whispered, cupping her friend’s left cheek. “I don’t want you worrying about me.”
“You’re all I have, Remi,” Olivia said in her thick drawl. “And when I see you out here like this, it doesn’t help my nerves.”
“You sound like an old lady.”
“You look like an old lady,” Olivia retorted. Remi chuckled under her breath as she stared down at the scratchy wool blanket around her.
“Yeah,” she laughed. “I sure do.”
“You know…if you didn’t come out here so often, we could go on raids together.”
“I’m aware,” Remi chuckled. “But it’s not my thing. Seriously. I like to think of myself as more of an explorer than a fighter.”
“You’re not going to be doing either without me.” Olivia stretched her hands out in front of Remi and closed her eyes. Remi watched curiously as her friend’s hands began to pulse a deep, dark red, so dark that it made her fingers appear frostbitten. After a few pulses, a crack was heard and then a miniature fire appeared in front of her, the sole flame rising every time Olivia moved her fingers in a wave-like motion as if she was playing a piano. The warmth made Remi feel better immediately, and she even thought about removing the blanket so that she could really get close to the fire, but she knew that Olivia would scold her. She kept it on.
“That never gets old,” Remi sighed, allowing the tips of her fingers to get close to the flames. She could feel her skin regaining its vitality.
“So,” Olivia began. “When do you want to leave this place?”
“Why do you say that?” Remi laughed. “Am I that obvious?”
“Painfully.”
“Well, when I think that we can make it on our own…we’ll head out.”
“It might be too late then. There hasn’t been a conflict in twenty years. Not a single one. No one wants to risk getting killed.”
“Our town raids others.”
“It’s different. They only steal supplies, and usually little things. Nothing serious. The towns nearby raid us too and there’s rarely any violence. I think it’s all a farce if you ask me. Raiding each other back and forth to make it look like we’re tough.”
“We’re no different than everyone else,” Remi replied. “Just stuck in limbo, waiting for the chance to make it out, one way or the other.”
“If you had the strength now…would you go to Paragon…or even Cimmerian?”
“In a heartbeat,” Remi grinned. She clenched a fist and raised it over her head, examining her frail and gaunt arms. “I’m going to die anyways…might as well see some fantastic things before I do, you know? All I need is a little more time. A year, tops. And I’m gone.”
“What do you think those worlds are like?” Olivia whispered, rubbing her hands together. She was staring hard at the light show in the sky now, but it was apparent by the distant gaze in her eyes that she wasn’t paying much attention.
“Much like ours, I suppose. Just fancier. There’s probably castles and royalty and powerful warriors out there, just waiting for their chance to strike. The war for dominance of the three worlds will start, many people will die, and then things will go back to how it is now. Lots of peace and quiet until people start increasing in numbers again.”
“I wonder what it feels like to not exist,” Olivia replied.
“Probably what it feels like when you sleep and don’t dream.”
“You think the Sages of Legend are really out there? Paragon’s warriors?”
Remi turned to her friend and scowled. “What does that matter?”
“I was just thinking that if they’re around, they’re going to be the ones that determine how the war is going to go.”
“Maybe…but we don’t know what kind of warriors are in Cimmerian or Paragon. There could be warriors from centuries ago that are far more powerful, and that’s why everything is at a stalemate. No one knows who has what on the enemy’s side. And since we cease to exist when we die now, it’s a lot harder to take risks.”
“Still, the Sages will be valuable.”
“The Sages are just stories,” Remi scoffed. “And even if they’re not, their power isn’t so great. Using their souls as swords…it’s not practical.”
“I think it sounds pretty cool.”
“You would. All you can do is make your body warm.”
“At least I don’t need a blanket to do it for me,” Olivia retorted, snatching Remi’s blanket off of her and throwing it to the side. Remi yelped at the sudden chill that imprisoned her body. Barely able to move, she slowly stretched out her frail arms until she was able to retrieve the source of her warmth. Once the blanket was back upon her shoulders, she noticed that Olivia had walked away. She didn’t bother standing to her feet. She was already exhausted from the sudden cold. Breathing heavily, her eyes began to sink as she glanced back at the colorful light show in the distance, now beginning to fade as the sun slowly rose in their place.
Dawn had come, and with it, she would once again be painfully visible.
Her hair was beginning to fall from her scalp and it was already malnourished—thin and brittle to the touch. Her parents had told her that it had once been a full head of magnificent strawberry blonde hair. Now it was merely a shade of its former glory. Her body was as thin as bones and her face was as disturbing as a skeleton’s bare smile. Some would say she was beautiful, if only she could gain a little weight and maintain it.
On most days she slept twice as much as anyone else, and it was only at night, when she was invisible again, and her physical features were not easily s
een, that she felt the most alive. When her thoughts were solely her own and not echoes of her peers.
It was then that she “day-dreamed.”
Of a life greater than the one she had been dealt. She heard the worries of her parents all too clear—that she would never travel, never be useful, and never be a warrior. But she just didn’t believe it. She felt it deep down in her brittle bones…she was destined for greatness.
Now…
If only she could do more than fight with a measly little eidolon—her soul in sword form.
Then she would be getting somewhere.
Her friend didn’t know it. But she was able to fashion a blade just like the Sages of Legend. A blade created from her very soul. It had not been an easy process, and it was actually a mistake the first time it happened.
She had been running away from him again, through the woods with nothing but her blanket to shield her from the unforgiving bite of winter. She had run with abandonment, and somehow she was expanding the distance between her and the pursuer. To the point that she could no longer hear his footsteps. She stopped to catch her breath, and that was when she heard something.
It had only been a clump of snow falling from the branches above, but the break in the silence nearly made her jump out of her skin. She placed a hand over her chest to calm her beating heart, as loud as a drum snare, and then she felt the hilt.
It was just sticking out of her chest. Looking like it was made of brown leather and intertwined with strips of red cloth, she stared down at it as if it had been there the entire time. She wrapped a fragile hand around the hilt and gripped it tight.
She wasn’t sure if the eidolon would be strong enough, but she wasn’t about to pass up on any opportunity to get stronger either.
She pulled at the hilt and the blade came out like it was sheathed in paper. She held it above her head and examined it. It was a dark purple Falchion, almost resembling a machete in design. It hummed when she turned it over to the side, and a smile escaped her lips. But then the grin faded as quickly as it appeared.