4 more days…

Why yes, I am planning on showing off snippets of the cover until launch day. To be fair, I’ll probably cave any day now and just post the whole cover.

Barring disaster, in 4 days The Fall of Witches will go live for ordering, well… everywhere. I can’t wait to share it with you. There’s so much cool stuff in it, from improbably placed stone circles, to well known legends gone impossibly (and weirdly) wrong — thanks Elias!

Of course, I’m deep in the throws of revising book 3, so I’m itching to share that with you too!

Coming soon…

On the 30th of January the next instalment of the Wizard and the Imp will be available wherever you can buy books!

To whet your appetite here’s a wee bit of the cover…

Nyree and Elias Forester are back in the thick of it. Bullies at school. Open hostilities between the two Faery Courts. Witches in the woods. The looming threat of the Coranaid, an ancient enemy who can hear any words spoken anywhere in the world. With all this a closely held secret from family and friends, Nyree and Elias have few allies to fall back on.
 
The arrival of refugee gryphons from the middle-east provides the final spark for war among the Faeries. But what drove the gryphons from their home? Could it be related to the Forester’s own enemy?

I’m especially excited to share this one. It’s the nature of books that the journey from idea to paperback is a long one. Even when everything goes smoothly the delay could test anyone’s patience. The birth of The Fall of Witches has been more challenging than usual. As I’m sure you can imagine from the title, I had hoped to have it out for Halloween last year. Actually, because I’m foolish, I’d intended to release it on Halloween. Which is not how anything works, but I’m still learning. (That’s how I know I’m not dead!)

The Fall of Witches came with some additional difficulties right at the worst possible time. Personal stuff for the team, so I’m not going to go into details. Suffice it to say that everyone lived through it. So a little late but, I hope you agree, worth it in the end.

Particular thanks to Becky Salter of Wilder Ways Art and Illustrations. I’ll share the full cover with you over the next few days. (Promise!) When I do, you’ll see that she’s knocked it out of the park on this one. If you ever see a book with this image on it…

…you should get it immediately!

Sneak

This week’s image brings us back to the wolf pack of the Highland Wildlife Park and was taken… well in the past. It’s been shamefully long since I last visited, so I’m looking forward to seeing what’s changed.

Clearly, something caught this guy’s attention. Possibly the herd of reindeer in the next enclosure. Apparently keeping prey animals next to their natural predators actually improves their breeding potential and overall wellbeing. Which doesn’t sound reasonable at all, but I trust the expertise of people who actually study this stuff for a living. If there’s one thing I’m not fed up with its experts and their expertise. The world could do with a whole lot more of that, I think.


Chùlaibh pricked up her ears. There was that sound again. She didn’t know what it meant, exactly. It wasn’t a noise she’d heard before. But that was significant too. Whatever she’d heard wasn’t pack. Until proven otherwise, that made it dangerous.

Had she been one of the others, great alpha Onchu or even his mate Niamh, she might have been unafraid. After all, what in this world could threaten them? But Chùlaibh wasn’t them. Not even close. For as long as she remembered, she had been the pack’s omega. Chùlaibh knew that other creatures, the two-legs for example, thought that meant she was the least of wolves. She also knew that that wasn’t how wolves worked. That wasn’t pack. Hindmost she may be, but that too had its role to play. If that pack was a running wolf, she was the tail. In swinging the wrong way she would balance the pack so that it would keep its feet.

So it was now. Truly she was slower than the rest. A hunt would usually end for Chùlaibh many minutes after it had for their prey. She didn’t mind that. As omega she’d wait her turn to eat, anyway. On this occasion it proved an advantage. As Onchu must have foreseen. Nothing would sneak up on hear pack.

She snuffed the air. It was like the scent of a two-legs, yet not at the same time. The same weird smells of metal and oil. That odd null, dullness of the tough shiny material they liked to use. Hot dust. An edge that was not quite burning but wasn’t anything else either. All the smells that come with a two-legs. What was missing was the meaty, sweaty, greasy scent that was the two-legs itself and not just the stuff they carried around everywhere.

Chùlaibh whined a warning to the pack. Low and cautious. Be alert, it said. Alert but not panicked. All might be well, but it could be otherwise.

Moments later, Onchu arrived. He stood tall and proud beside her with all his senses focussed where she was looking. Long moments of attention stretched out before Onchu relaxed and Chùlaibh settled alongside him. All was well. The alpha wolf turned and licked her face in gratitude for a job well done.

Then the noise returned. Closer than before. Chùlaibh whined, higher pitched this time. Her ears flattened back against her head even as Onchu’s hackles raised.

A Thing stepped into the clearing. It moved on two legs but it smelled wrong. Across it’s whole being Chùlaibh could see no flesh anywhere on it. The Thing’s outside was hard and cold like a beetle’s. Most disturbing were its eyes. Hard, dry, black domes. No colour anywhere. Just lifeless orbs that seemed to lead to nowhere.

Onchu barked an order and the whole pack moved as one. Niamh slipped in next to Onchu. Her lips parted in a silent snarl. Her hackles were raised so she was fractionally taller even than their alpha. The rest of the pack departed on swift, soundless paws into the woods. Moments later, Chùlaibh joined them. For once ahead of her leaders. The alpha couple held their ground for ten heartbeats longer to ensure the Thing didn’t follow. They overtook Chùlaibh in half as much time and the pack vanished into the forest.

Hive

I took this week’s photo while I was on Bute a while back. At least, I think so. It was earlier this year at some point. To be honest, this year has been… interesting. Plenty of ups to balance out the few sizable downs and even those seem to have come out okay, so it looks like we’re going to finish up on the sunny side again. Perhaps I shouldn’t tempt fate in that way — I’ll be breathing out a huge sigh of relief when (‘cos I’m an optimist at heart) my near and dear join the 2022 survivors club.

Ah yes, the bees! We visited *mumbles indistinctly* abbey. Or possibly it was a monastery. Religious ruins at any rate. The site had been largely taken over by nature, with solid mature trees growing in what would surely have been inconvenient locations in a working abbey. One such tree loomed over the gate to the upper grounds and chapel. As we approached it seemed the tree also buzzed. Which is in my experience unusual for a tree. On entering the upper grounds, we could see a swarm of bees forming a hive. Knowing little about bees we were, naturally, wary of sauntering up to inspect them. However, after being there a short while they seemed peaceable enough. I ventured closer and snapped a few shots. The bees, obviously, carried on being bees and minding their own business.


I blinked and rubbed his eyes. I’d been staring at the bees for two days now. And the night between. Not that I’d seen them much in the dark hours. Hadn’t seen much of anything. Master Hartlan had chuckled when I’d asked for a lamp and told me that if I was focussing on the bees correctly, I would perceive them without sight. Grudgingly I had to admit he was right.

“Any joy, Calum?” asked Master Hartlan.

“None,” I replied. Perhaps a little more sullenly than was warranted.

“Well,” said my Master, “through—”

“I know,” I interrupted. “Through patience comes all things.”

Yes, it was rude. I was tired. Hungry too. I knew it was the price to pay for greatness, and a small one at that. Ask me any other time and I’d tell you it was a price I was more than happy to pay. Funny how that’s not always the case while you’re paying it.

“Quite so,” said Master Hartlan. “Well keep it up, you never know when it will happen. Remember, you are trying to get inside their mind. You must understand them. Without understanding there is nothing.”

He had always been far too patient with me. Occupational hazard, I suppose. You don’t get to be a Master Summoner without it.

I didn’t see my mentor leave. My attention was already back on the bees. For a change I focussed on the buzzing. Through my long vigil I had all but tuned it out. As background as the sound of my own breath. This time I listened to them. That undulating sound that rippled and flowed around the swarm. Not just one sound. A whole harmony of them. Layers of nuance and context shifting, ebbing, pulsing. Like waves of thought in my own mind.

I felt the pattern lock.

My perception shifted.

I was the hive. I was the swarm.

This is where it gets tricky. You’re expecting me to say I could feel my body, hard and chitinous, bumped and jostled by my hive-mates. That’s not how it works though. I could feel the parts of my body, surging and flowing together to a single purpose. Each one bore a small shard of me. My mind composed of thousands of smaller fragments. I was in no single one of them. No part of the whole where my core me resided. I was them all and they all were me.

Distantly, I felt a pang of hunger. Remote and alone. A single forgotten fragment. But more important, in a way. I could sense that. Strange though the concept was. It was hungry and I could do something about that. I selected a cluster of a few dozen fragments of myself. They pulled a chunk of honeycomb off the hive and flew it over to the remote fragment, dripping its sticky payload on the grass.

If you’ve never removed a chunk of your mind and sent it forth it will be difficult to describe the experience to you. Harder still to relate what it’s like to welcome that part back and with it the thoughts and impressions that you didn’t have at the time, but suddenly had always had them. Well, if you visit the monastery one day, perhaps you will learn too.

When the hive-enclave returned I absorbed the memories of bringing the honey to that other part of us. It had raised an appendage and propelled the honey into what must have been its mouth. I could feel the hunger ebb. We turned our full attention to the matter of building the hive-home. Not that our attention had ever—

“Well done, Calum!” I could feel Master Hartlan’s meaty hand pat my back. My real back that is. Not the hive’s.

I shook myself all over, recalling my body’s true layout. Two arms, two legs, only one head. A mind that existed in a single place at a time.

“What did it for you?” asked my Master.

“It was the buzzing,” I said. “I listened to the buzzing and then I could feel their mind. Not lots, just one mind shared among them.”

“The buzzing?” said Master Hartlan. It wasn’t really a question. “That’s most unusual. Well, keep that to yourself, lad. The sonomancers will go nuts if they think we’re muscling in on their turf.”

The Orb

Hot off the presses this week. On Sunday we unexpectedly came by some tickets for the Enchanted Forest, a light and sound show in Faskally Wood near Pitlochry. Some friends had to cancel at the last minute (like we had exactly enough time to get there, etc.)

Steady drizzle greeted us when we got off the bus from Pitlochry to the forest. Which turned out to be an excellent thing for the experience. All those tiny water droplets showed off the light in tangible beams. The photo has no filters applied and is very much a reflection of what I saw with my (nearly) naked eyes. The effect lighting is, of course, very effective, but to me it’s the ambient lighting within the forest that completely sells it.

As with last time I went, I’m on the fence between magic vibes and something more sci-fi. Presumably the artists who set up the show are aiming for magic and mystery. Last time I went there were chaser lights dripping down from above us which put me in mind of Under the Dome and its ‘pink stars falling in lines.’ I guess that stuck the sci-fi thing in my head. Perhaps I’m just weird.

Anyway, I figured that this week’s story might be a blend of the two…


Rough hands snatched me back from the searing beams and into the comforting shadows.

“You alright, Jay?” asked Jackan, my best friend.

“I think so,” I replied. I was lying. My arm hurt horribly where the light had touched it.

Humans are clever. Devilishly so. Viciously. Still, this new use of their barbaric ingenuity was an unwelcome surprise. My fingertips probed the beams although they even hurt to look at.

Pain. Pure and unrelenting. Unmistakable in its pitch and hue. They had managed to harness sunlight and deliver it on demand. Much worse than their Broad-Spectrum Blasters. Those hurt if they got you. Dad said the colours matched sunlight well enough to be dangerous. The bigger guns, like on the tanks and stuff, those were deadly. A couple of years ago I’d seen one rip through half my class before we’d got to safety. Ms MacAllan still had scars from where she’d shielded us from the blasts. I’d had my first taste of human weapons that day. Not one of the big guns, luckily. One of the soldiers had snapped off a shot as I tried to dash from one bush to another. The pain of that still made me feel sick and sort of woozy.

This new light was worse. Not just the light itself, although that too. I tapped my fingertip against the stark white beam and grimaced at the sizzling pain. The worst thing about it was, they’d set it as a trap. There weren’t any of them around. None to be heard or smelled anywhere. I was sure of it. We weren’t even close to any of their settlements. The ‘city’ they called ‘Dunfermline’ was a good half-day’s walk away. Not that any of us were stupid enough to go there. The guns I could understand. Kind of. They don’t want us sucking their blood. Which would be fair enough, except that I can’t imagine any of us want that either. That stuff is bogging. Even rabbit is way nicer. Sheep and cow are okay, which is just as well. Deer blood was my favourite. Human? No. Not even if I was starving.

I had a taste once, on a dare. Jackan has a cousin who’s… well, let’s just say Dad doesn’t like it when he’s hanging around. Well, Jackan’s cousin got some human blood from a really dodgy guy he knows. They say that taking human blood can give you special powers. I’m not sure what, exactly, but it’s supposed to be really cool. That’s what loads of folk say, anyway. Well, I had a taste and I can promise you they are wrong. I may have vomited all over both Jackan and his cousin. Served them right.

“What are we going to do now?” asked Jackan. I could hear the panic rising in his voice.

“Well,” I said as calmly as I could, which was not very, “we’re going to figure out a way to get away from here. Then we’re going to go home and never come here again.”

“Okay. A way away.” Jackan’s eyes were wide and frightened. Not even a hint of a smile at his own joke. I did my best to keep it together for my friend’s sake.

The burning white beams shone past both sides of the tree we were sheltering behind. You could see that as a problem. The upside was, there was only one choice for escape.

Listening in the darkness, I could hear the rain ticking against bushes about twenty metres away in that direction. Rhododendrons by the sound of it. Dense cover with thick leaves. That was good news. We just had to get there and we’d be okay.

I took Jackan’s hand and stood, readying myself to run. Jackan pulled back curling into a ball against the tree trunk.

“Oh, no. Oh no no no…” he whispered.

“Stay where you are or we’ll shoot,” said a harsh voice from off to the left. Humans.

“We have them Captain,” said another from the right. “Awaiting containment vehicle.”

“Hnggg!” shouted the one from the left.

“What the…” from the right. He was cut off by the swish-thud of a rock-slinger.

“Boys, run!” It was my dad. “Make for the bushes and then straight home. I’ll be right behind you.”

His rock-slinger sung out again. A blast of blue-white light flashed back in answer. For a grim moment, I saw Dad lit up by reflections from where the Broad-Spectrum Blast hit the tree he was hiding behind. He flashed me a grin, broke cover, and sent another stone straight up the beam.

Jackan and I ran. We ran until I felt my heart would burst through my chest. We didn’t stop until we were home.

The Autumnal

When I started writing today the rain was hammering down outside and I fancied adding a bit of colour. As images go it’s nothing earthshattering: a holiday snapshot taken while I was visiting my folks in the US. Not a special tree. Most definitely not in a special location. But I was there, and it felt good.

Often when I take these photos it’s with a story prompt in mind. I’ll see something and a story-stub pops into my head, so I take the picture and post it here. Possibly that’s cheating. I don’t think so. Obviously, otherwise I’d do it differently. Well, whatever way you cut it this one definitely wasn’t cheating. I almost didn’t use the image as I couldn’t think of something to write for it. Which is pretty much the closest I’ve come to writer’s block. Then I remembered a random wittering with my daughter while we were out walking a while ago. Let’s see if I can make something of it…


Margo loved autumn. When asked, sometimes she would claim it was the colours. All those rich oranges and reds pushing to overwhelm the last hardy snatches of green as if the trees were burning away their summer foliage. Other times she would say it was the tastes. Yes, the obvious pumpkins and spices and all that. Also, that rich, earthy, not-quite-smell taste on the air. Most people didn’t seem to get that in Margo’s experience, which was probably why it was her favourite flavour. Some day’s her answer was that she liked when it was cooler. Being luminously pale, summer was a time for covering up and sweltering. The alternative was sunburn so hot it could launch rockets.

If you got her in the right mood, she might claim that the season had a sense of potential. Like the world was getting ready for something.

Cynics among us might claim that she liked autumn best because her birthday was in the middle of it. Not a bad reason, in fairness, just not Margo’s reason. Until the week after her thirteenth birthday, Margo didn’t know the real reason either.

On the morning of the 26th of October Margo awoke to grey skies that threatened insidious drizzle. The kind of rain that seeped in everywhere without having the courtesy to form proper puddles. The air felt charged. Not the heavy pressure of an impending thunderstorm, but rather a lively, light, electrical feeling that left the fine hairs on her arms standing up. It crackled against her skin when she moved.

Her mum, of course, denied all knowledge of this. “What an imagination,” was all she said in response to Margo’s enthusing.

She left the house with a spring in her step, despite the dreichness of the morning. The aliveness of the world had somehow never been more apparent before. Margo breathed deeply and sighed contentedly as she reached the crossing and jabbed the button and waited for the traffic to stop.

It wasn’t a day for looking down, but something drew Margo’s gaze to the gutter.

“Oh, poor thing.” Margo crouched to inspect the body of a dead hedgehog. Clearly the victim of a hit-and-run in the night.

Although she knew she shouldn’t touch such things, something drew Margo’s hand toward the small corpse. She stopped it millimetres from the creature’s prickles. What was she even doing?

CRACK!

A blue spark shot from her palm into the dead animal. She yelped and jumped back, more from shock than pain. She stared accusingly at the hedgehog, though what say it had in the matter was beyond her. Surprisingly, the animal stared back at her, with an expression halfway between ‘thank you’ and ‘what… just… happened?’ Then it stood up, shook itself off and hurried away under the hedge on the far side of the pavement.

Margo stared in disbelief at her hand. Had that just happened? She was sure it had been dead before. Hadn’t it? Never mind dead. It had been flat. In the far distance the steady beeping of the cross signal gained a harmony of impatiently honking car horns. Eventually the green man was replaced by a red one and the cars moved off. If she’d had any attention left, Margo would have seen some inappropriate gestures from the driver of the front cars.

“Oh, get over yourself!” yelled a voice from beside Margo. It was Frankie, Margo’s best friend.

“Hey, Frankie,” said Margo distractedly. She was still staring at her hand.

“Are you alright?” asked Frankie. “Something wrong with your hand?”

“No, no. All good,” said Margo. She dragged her gaze away to look at her friend. Frankie was pale as death, apart from around her nose which had been rubbed raw. Her eyes were bloodshot and tired looking. “Are you alright?” Margo finally asked.

“A bit under the weather,” said Frankie. “I’ll live though. What happened to you?”

“I…” Margo bit her lip. How to tell Frankie without sounding insane. She laughed at herself. How to tell her what exactly? “I really don’t know.”

An idea suddenly seized Margo and before she could chicken out or over think it, she grabbed her best friend’s hand. Instantly she could feel the energy flowing. In from the air around her and out through her hand. The power of change, of purest autumn. She knew it for a certainty, while also knowing that that made little sense at all.

Colour returned to Frankie’s cheeks. The cracked, chafed skin around her nose healed. Even her posture shifted from the weary stoop of an unwell teen to that of an energetic youth in the thick of living her best life.

“Woah!” said Frankie. “I didn’t know you could do that!”

“It’s news to me too,” said Margo.

“What else can you do?” asked Frankie.

“Let’s find out.” Margo grinned at her friend. She jabbed the crossing button again and the lights changed immediately. The friends skipped across the road together ready to make some changes.

Underbridge

As if it needed introduction, this week’s story prompt image is of Glenfinnan Viaduct. Yes, I appreciate that it’s not one of those exciting shots of it with a bright red, magical steam-train chuffing along. All I can provide here is a boring old 2 carriage Scotrail service. In my defence it was February when I took this shot. There were blizzards later in the day. Despite the cold we had a lovely hike through the woods around the viaduct that struck a pleasing balance between managed land and wilderness.

Once we got past the obvious jokes about watching out for low flying cars (no, I’m not sorry) we managed to see the viaduct for what it actually is. Which is a grand feat of engineering. I hadn’t appreciated before that the entire thing is made of poured concrete. If you look closely (at the real thing, not my photo) you can see the woodgrain from the mould structure. Perhaps that’s only surprising if you’re me.

Anyway, on to the story. Trolls have been on my mind recently — I’ve had to step up my Library Trolling efforts over the past couple of weeks as we’ve had some events and deadlines to hit.


Gnarl scowled along the line of arches. The train chuntered slowly along the rails that ran along the top of the bridge. Only it wasn’t just a bridge. Not from Gnarl’s point of view anyway. It was his home.

Gnarl was a troll. He hadn’t asked to be born that way. Just like he hadn’t asked to live under a bridge. That was what it was really. Not a home. Not to normal people anyway. But that wasn’t Gnarl’s fate. He didn’t have a choice in the matter.

He hated the way the trains rumbled over his home. He’d heard that the clackety-clack of steel wheels on steel rails was a delight for some. A romantic sound that hinted at a simpler world. All Gnarl knew was that it shook his walls and ceilings in a most irksome way. At least this one was a diesel. Those awful steamers on the other hand. They lurched and chugged across his roof in a way that rattled his bones if he was home. He tried not to be, but the timetable seemed to keep changing.

Rain dripped onto his head in a steady drizzle. Clearly it was going to be that kind of day. The racket of passing trains inside, or the steady clinging chill outside. He turned to go back under his bridge. At least there he could get on with his project.

It was all Jack’s fault, of course. Gnarl had lived for many years under his bridge. While he couldn’t say he’d been happy, he hadn’t exactly been miserable either. Then Jack had come into his life. The boy seemed made of boundless energy and enthusiasm. He hadn’t been scared of Gnarl, which had made a pleasant change. Most people ran away screaming when they saw a troll. Not Jack, though. He’d walked right up and shaken Gnarls hand. Shaken his hand like he was a proper person! They’d been friends ever since.

It had been lovely at first. Gnarl had never had a friend before. Now he had one. Which was a good thing. Even now, though he blamed Jack for his current misery, he couldn’t wait to see his friend. But there was the other side of it too. A few months they’d met, Jack had started bringing stories. That too was glorious. The boy spent hours reading tales to Gnarl and showing him the pictures. They even spent some time making up their own ones.

It had been bliss. Until that book had appeared. The Library Troll. It told of a place where trolls didn’t live under bridges. Instead, they lived inside proper buildings and looked after thousands of books. Gnarl had hung on every word. He’d loved it. And hated it. It was the worst thing Jack could have done to him. He’d brought hope.

Once Gnarl had thought hope was a good thing. It sounded good and in all the stories it was what everyone had wanted. In fairness, it probably was a good thing. Gnarl had to acknowledge that. It showed that things could be better. That change was possible. The downside was that it also meant change hadn’t happened yet. That was where Gnarl was stuck. That awful pre-change state. All he had to cling to was the hope that his project would bring change.

Gnarl crawled into the cosy space he’d made under a pile of junk. It wasn’t really all that warm, but at least it kept the rain off. At least it offered the books some protection. He returned to his project. He was going to learn to read. Then he’d be able to be a library troll. Everything would be better once he was a library troll.

“Gnarl?” came a voice from outside. It was Jack. “Are you home?”

“I’m here,” replied Gnarl.

He waited while Jack wriggled through the assorted objects that separated the inside from the outside. The boy grinned as he straightened up from crawling through the final tunnel. He crossed the ‘room’ and gave Gnarl a hug.

“I brought some more books,” said Jack.

He unslung his backpack and produced a small pile of the treasured objects.

Gnarl grinned. “Thank you,” he said.

He started sorting through Jack’s latest finds. His mouth moved silently as he puzzled out the titles. He frowned at a Beast Quest. Trolls were never the good guys in those and came to a bad ending. From the troll’s point of view at least. They were practice at least. They made him figure out weird words just from the letters. Further down the pile there were a couple of books about puppies and one about a hamster called Humphrey. He liked those. They made him smile.

The last book was a puzzle.

“An Introduction to Joinery,” he read, slowly. An odd sounding story. In fact, it didn’t sound like a story at all. He turned to Jack. “Do you think my reading will be good enough soon?” he asked.

Jack’s face fell. “Yeah,” he said. “Soon, I guess.”

Gnarl’s brow furrowed as he opened Introduction to Joinery. There were lots of good words in it. No story that he could see, though. Perhaps it was just his reading wasn’t good enough, but all the book seemed to do was tell you how to build walls and doors and simple furniture. At least there was plenty of reading practice for him. With any luck he’d be out of his dump of a home soon. He could pack up his books, the only possessions he really valued, and find a library to live in.

“Maybe I’ll be out of here in a month or two,” said Gnarl.

“I guess,” said Jack. He was even quieter than before. “I’ll miss you, you know.”

That stopped Gnarl in his tracks. He had never thought about it in those terms. Missing someone was something he’d read about, but he’d never imagined it would be relevant to him. He considered the idea for a few minutes.

“I’ll miss you too,” he said. “But I need to get away from here. I want to live in a library and be a library troll.”

“I know,” whispered Jack. “I want that for you too. It’s just… I’ll miss you.”

Gnarl looked down at the Joinery book in his hands. All around him vast piles of books leaned precariously against the makeshift walls of stacked wooden sheets and blocks of stone. It wasn’t much of a library, but it was a start. Gnarl turned a few pages.

“Jack,” he said slowly. “I’ve had an idea.” He held up the book.

Jack smiled and it was like sunshine returned to the world. “I hoped you would,” he said.

The Chase

Breaking with recent traditions, this week’s story prompt image is relatively recent. It was taken in July this year in the walled garden at Culzean castle. Yes, I go there a lot. I know it isn’t the only place worth going. It’s still a favourite, so I don’t see us breaking the habit any time soon.

When I took the photo, it wasn’t with a view to a story prompt. My intent was to egg us on with turning our front garden into a wildflower meadow. A few years ago, we formed an optimistic plan to cut the grass back hard and scatter a variety of seeds. It turns out it isn’t as easy as that. When is it ever?

Anyway. Enough witter. Story time. While this one is set at some point after book 2 (which is due out at the end of next month!) I don’t think it has much in the way of spoilers. Certainly, it is at best plot adjacent. Nothing in this relates to any of the story-arcs in the series except involving a couple of the characters.


Faltha closed her eyes and lifted her face into the afternoon sunlight. A gentle breeze rocked the dandelion head that was her starting block. She loved this time of year. Not just because this was when the Tower Court Games happened, though she enjoyed that too. The liminal time between true summer and actual autumn was her absolute favourite. The baking heat of a full summer sun had given way to a cosy, residual warmth. (When you’re twenty centimetres tall these things matter.) The air carried a delicious scent that she could taste with her whole body. It tasted of change. Of poised readiness. And it was ephemeral — lasting only a couple of weeks on a good year. To Faltha that elevated it to true beauty.

Also, there was the chance to show off for the Court. She’d be lying if she said she didn’t enjoy that. After all, what was the point of being the best if no one else knew it?

To her left Nuff limbered up on his poppy starting block. He was captain of the Tower Scout Squadron and a formidable flyer. Beyond him Elanor was adjusting her goggles for the fifteenth time. She was the wildcard in this race. Faltha hadn’t even met her before the start of the Games. From what she’d seen, Elanor was quick. Not as fast as Nuff in a straight line but, dear goodness, that lass could swerve.

That was the name of the game here. A race below the flower canopy through dense meadow. At the core was a single thistle-seed wish that had to be collected and delivered to the wish-seer judge at the far end. That was where Faltha’s strength came in. She’d spent years as a wish-gatherer. Quite simply, she was better at finding wishes.

Well, also there was the matter of sheer power. As a member of the Court’s High Council, she had more blood-oaths to her name than the other finalists. To a faery that meant power. Of course, with great power comes great potential for embarrassment if she didn’t win. No. That was no way to think. Faltha gathered her focus, shrugged her shoulders loose and flicked her wings into readiness.

The judges flag went up. Any second—

Now!

Faltha launched herself from her starting block and dove for the meadow floor. She jinked past the thick flower stems following the tell-tale whisper of the hidden wish. She banked off to the left. It was not far ahead. Sneaky, putting it so close to the start.

Behind her the characteristic crash of Nuff charging through the undergrowth closed in. His main tactic seemed to be to trust to Faltha’s sense of where the wish was and then batter a path to get there first. Clever, but with one key fault.

She banked right, heading away from the wall. Nuff followed, cutting the corner in the hope of arriving first. Perfect.

Faltha grabbed a foxglove stem and hauled herself back on track. One down. For now, at least. The question was, where had Elanor gone?

Not as deep turned out to be the answer. The newcomer was flying near the canopy. Perilously close to disqualification. It gave her a good view. One which she was using to her advantage. She’d clearly seen Faltha’s ruse with Nuff and had worked out Faltha’s destination. Elanor put on a burst of speed. Would she get there first? It would be close.

The two faeries swerved desperately around stems and low hanging petals. Faltha reached the wish a blink ahead of her competition. As she grasped the fluffy fronds some instinct made her fold her wings and drop to the loose soil floor. She rolled on impact and recovered in time to see Elanor slam through the space where Faltha would have been and crash to a stop against a nettle stem. Faltha’s blood chilled.

“Are you alright?” she called.

No response.

Faltha darted over to her courtier’s unmoving form. “Do you need help?” she asked.

Still no reply.

As Faltha drew near Elanor suddenly burst into the air. She grabbed the thistle-seed and shot away.

“You absolute goblin!” yelled Faltha. Which was not fair, and she shouldn’t say such things. She’d apologise to both Elanor and the handful of goblins who were watching after the race. Thinking of which, Faltha threw herself after the younger faery.

She caught up with only a metre to go. Desperation drove her to simply grab at the thistle-seed’s fluff. Faltha had the strength to simply pull it from Elanor’s grasp. But did she have the time? She pulled. Elanor pulled back.

They shot out of the undergrowth at eyewatering speed and Faltha still hadn’t claimed the seed.

Then the unexpected happened. Elanor let go. She shifted her wings and halted, mid-air, and saluted Faltha. The sudden change in forces launched Faltha through the air to land at the judge’s feet. The bell sounded. The race ended. She’d won.

Elanor flitted over, breathing heavily. “I didn’t want to win that way,” she said through gulps of air.

The judge pressed the trophy into Faltha’s hand. She smiled and pressed the other side into Elanor’s. Faltha lifted both their arms triumphantly and smiled. The spectators cheered. Faltha didn’t care for whom.

“And I don’t want to win this way.” Faltha turned her smile encouragingly toward Elanor. “Not on my own anyway. You show promise. And respect. Neither will go unnoticed.”

Wings of Chaos

Another one from the archives this week. This one harks back to our Orkney trip and our visit to the Tomb of the Eagles. The tomb itself (which houses no eagles, alive or dead) is rather dramatically sited and a fair walk from the visitor centre. As we were wandering back, minds filled with neolithic musings, the pictured butterfly fluttered over the path then followed us some way. The photo doesn’t do it any kind of justice. Its electric blue wings practically glowed in the sunlight.


John silently cursed his luck as he tiptoed through the tangle of reeds and grasses. Here he was with neither his net nor his proper camera. He hadn’t even picked up his notebook. After all, it had just been a wee stroll along the coast path. Something to clear his head.

He’d walked this route hundreds of times before. Familiarity had proven his enemy: it hadn’t occurred to him that there were new discoveries to be made on that well beaten path. Foolish. That was why he was here, after all. But his six-month expedition to the islands was drawing to an end and he hadn’t seen anything new in weeks. Then this happened.

Stealing closer to his quarry, John held his breath. Experience told him that the slightest drift in the air could mean the difference between discovering a new species and taking a photo of empty grass. No mistakes. Well, no more mistakes anyway. He’d only caught a glimpse of the beautiful creature. Unless his eyes were playing tricks on him, this would be the discovery of a lifetime. Perhaps something even greater.

It wasn’t hard to spot. The butterfly’s blue wings screamed for attention against the sea of greens where it rested. At first, he’d thought it merely an adonis blue. Nothing special. Barely worth a second look, really. But then it had moved and his whole world shifted.

The butterfly slowly shifted its wings. The white rims surrounding the shimmering blue brightened and tiny sparks rippled along its length. It beat them harder in response to some imperceptible air current. The sparks grew larger and zapped out to the nearest blades of grass leaving a speckle of black where they struck.

Moving at speeds that would lull a snail to sleep, John drew out his phone. He snapped a couple of photos at maximum zoom. Not great, but it was something at least. Taking all possible care, he closed in.

A step.

Another.

The hairs on his arms stood up as a prickle of static washed over his arms. The butterfly flapped lazily in the morning sunlight. Standing as close as he dared, John snapped another few photos and switched to video mode. The flapping intensified and the air fizzed with electricity. John’s heart hammered in his chest.

The butterfly took to the air like a snowflake that forgot how to fall. It drifted up. Bouncing with the turbulent air but moving, on average, toward John.

His heart was in his mouth by the time it had reached him. He hoped his phone was still recording. Couldn’t spare a glance to check. It was within arm’s reach now. John held out a trembling hand and felt the nip of tiny electric shocks as it toured the air above his hand.

The wind shifted suddenly. A gust that threw the wonderful creature toward his phone. Energy crackled all around the butterfly. The sparks surged.

Pop.

The butterfly vanished.

John couldn’t breathe. His heart thudded. Once. Twice. The air rippled and the butterfly reappeared on the other side of his phone.

“Tell me you got that,” he whispered to his device. He looked at the blank, black screen. A curl of smoke wafted from the charging port.

The Way is Barred

This week’s image was taken a little under a year ago. I think we were on a walk between Cambo House and the Kingsbarn Distillery. To me it has a Cambo sort of vibe, anyway, so I’ll go with that absent any other information. For those of you who haven’t been there, Cambo House is a delight. I’ve been to a couple of family weddings there, so we’ve had a good chance to have a poke about both the grounds and the house itself. Its proximity to a whisky distillery earns it bonus points, of course, and the woodland walk between the two is lovely in itself.


I fought my way through cloying undergrowth. My only guide was the chattering of running water. This deep into the Neverwood daylight tiptoed past the canopy turning green in envy at all the places it would never reach. In here the only directions that mattered were inward and away. My weary feet continued inward. Closer to the voice of the stream. Nearer to the goal of my quest.

During the last few hours the rilling of the stream had become a literal babbling. As the water flowed deeper into the woods it changed. It became more alive. I could clearly make out syllables now. The proper sounds of speech. They weren’t yet words. At least not in any language I knew of. I say that like I know many languages, which I don’t. I know one to speak, have overheard heard conversations in three others, and a smattering of words in a further two. The voice of the water spoke sounds that were alien to my ears. I stumbled on towards where the voice was clearest.

Everything was changed by the Neverwood. The stream flowed in from the mountains above as normal as water can be. This far in, so legends claim, one should not drink from the Neverbrook any more than one should drink another’s blood. Luckily for me rain was a constant companion. I had merely to set up a funnel into my waterskin overnight to have all the fresh water I could want.

Without warning the undergrowth gave way to a clearing. I stumbled against the sudden lack of resistance and nearly fell into a deep gully. At the bottom the Neverbrook ran shallow but swiftly. The water spoke words now. My journey was at last drawing to an end. Well, a middle, really. I still had to get back with my prize.

I listened for a moment. Not only were there words. The sounds had started forming sentences. That or the Neverwood was changing me into a madman. I suppose I’ll never know which is true. By whatever mechanism, the stream had many voices that all spoke together. Some of the voices I couldn’t understand. Others were as clear to me as those of my own village.

“Turn back,” they said. Variations on that theme, at any rate.

I could not.

I recalled my instructions. Cross where the voice of the waters speaks clear. Follow the way to the heart of the wood. Receive a seed of the sacred tree and return hope to our land.

Well, the waters spoke clear. A short way to my left a fallen tree offered a convenient bridge over the gully. Just as well as I had little idea how I could survive a plummet to the bottom where the waters ran. In the centre of my bridge was a cluster of tiny buildings. At home I would have thought them no more than twee garden ornaments. At the brink of the Neverbrook I was not so sure.

My foot touched the moss-covered wood when a voice rang out clear over the witterings of the water.

“You cannot pass!”

A tiny sprite had emerged from the nearest of the buildings. It hovered in the air in front of me at the height of my shoulder. As far as I could tell, the sprite bore no weapons. Even if she had, at barely the size of my hand, how could she possibly be a threat.

“I must,” I said. “Please don’t stand in my way.”

The sprite sighed. “You cannot pass.” Her voice carried a melancholy that I did not understand, though I soon would.

“Please,” I begged. “You must let me through. I don’t want to hurt you, but if I don’t return with a seed of the sacred tree, my people are doomed.”

She sighed again and fluttered aside.

“Thank you,” I said and began my crossing.

I took great care to step over the buildings without damaging them. I owed the tiny way-keeper at least that much. Two steps beyond I felt the air thicken. I pushed forward, though it was like swimming through treacle. The harder I pushed, the stronger it pushed back.

Sweat beaded on my brow and my breath came in ragged gasps. Perhaps I could ask the sprite for advice or assistance. I paused in my efforts, but the air didn’t return the favour. It pushed hard against me. My feet slipped on the damp moss covering the wood.

I lost my balance.

I fell.

“I said you could not pass,” said the sprite as I plunged to the water below.