~EXCERPT REVEAL!~ Rise of the Sea Witch ~ By Stacey Rourke
Title: Rise of the Sea
Witch
Author: Stacey
Rourke
Genre: YA Fantasy/ Fairy Tale and
Folklore
Cover Designer: Najla Qamber
Designs
Publisher: Anchor Group
Publishing
Blurb:
Details of the sea witch’s banishment have been
exaggerated. The body count that preempted it was not. Once an illustrious
princess, her hands and tentacles were stained with the blood of thousands. No
one could comprehend how the hooks of madness dragged her down from her life of
privilege.
Born Princess Vanessa of Atlantica, the ambitious young
royal was one of two children born to the great King Poseidon. She and her
brother, Triton, were groomed from birth to rule. Yet only one would ascend
that coveted throne. While carefree Triton flits through his training with a
cavalier demeanor and beguiling charm, Vanessa’s hunger for her father’s
acceptance drives her to push herself to the limits of magic, and combat to become
a leader worthy of her
people.
When war against the humans ravages their once regal
kingdom, political sides are chosen. Factions from the seven seas challenge the
existing leadership, pitting Vanessa against her brother in a vicious battle
for the crown. Traitors are exposed, dark family secrets revealed, and a once
strong sibling bond is strained to its breaking
point.
Only when the ink black waters from the ultimate
betrayal rescind, will the truth be known of how the villainous sea witch rose
with one name on her vengeful
lips--Triton.
Young Adult and Teen Reader voted Author of the Year
2012
Turning Pages Magazine Winner for Best YA book of 2013
& Best Teen Book of
2013
Stacey Rourke is the author of the award winning YA
Gryphon Series, the chillingly suspenseful Legends Saga, and the romantic
comedy Adapted for Film. She lives in Michigan with her husband, two beautiful
daughters, and two giant dogs. She loves to travel, has an unhealthy shoe
addiction, and considers herself blessed to make a career out of talking to the
imaginary people that live in her
head.
Visit her at www.staceyrourke.com
Facebook at www.facebook.com/staceyrourkeauthor
or on Twitter or instagram at
Rourkewrites.
Amazon: http://amzn.to/1OJcVNO
Prologue
I admit that in the past I was a
princess. They weren’t kidding when they called me … well, a spoiled twit.”
Tentacles rolling and churning beneath me, I turn to the newest member of my
little garden with effortless grace. Arms thrown out wide, I grant the
shriveled polyp a beguiling smile. Those around him tremble in fear, pulling as
far away from him as their roots deep within the ocean floor will allow.
“Through rather unfortunate circumstances it became mandatory I mend my ways.
And, yes, some of the techniques I employed earned me the title of
villain.”
“Never,
my Queen,” Floteson murmurs. Coiling around my upper arm, he drapes himself
across my shoulder.
Jetteson’s oily scales lovingly
brush my cheek. “Every one of them was deserving of your
wrath.”
Shoulders curling in, I pucker
my lips which are freshly glossed by a crimson sea-flower and tenderly scratch
each of them under their chins. “How horrible can I be to be so adored by such
sweet babies?”
“She shows us nothing but love,”
my darling zebra sharks chorus.
Their unwavering dedication
soothes me, allowing me to expel a calming breath that bubbles in a wreath around
my face.
“I am not the horrible beast
many think me to be. Yet I feel it is your own misconceptions that brought you
here, and led to … well, you know.” Floating passed my ornate vanity mirror,
which seems out of place in the dreary cave I call home, I suck in my cheeks.
Turning my head one way and then the other, I inspect my reflection. A smug
smile curls the corners of my lips. The woman staring back at me is positively
voluptuous with power, mayhem swirling within her clay-gray eyes. “Undoubtedly,
you’ve heard rumors of my
banishment.”
Hitching one eyebrow at my newly
planted polyp, I watch him squirm under the weight of my
attention.
“Do you even know my true given
name, I wonder? Before hateful whisperings from the farthest reaches of the
Seven Seas dubbed me The Sea Witch, I went by another name: Princess Vanessa of
Atlantica. I harbored dreams of bringing peace and happiness to the kingdom …
as their noble queen.”
Jabbing my hands on to my ample
hips, I turn in a swirl of black and purple. “I’m not sure if that pitiful pout
is caused by your deep longing to hear more, or if you’re mourning the loss of
your shriveled limbs. But,” with a theatrical roll of my wrist, I snap my
fingers—my cauldron sparks to life, an ethereal green glow simmering from
within, “I choose to think the former because it’s about me … and all of my
favorite things are.
“It would be predictable for me
to say it all began with the death of my mother. Predictable and
false.”
Water rushes beneath me with one
mighty flap of all my tentacles. The power of the act propels me over to my
alchemy shelves, where my fingers flick over the exposed vials. Some days I
seek to terrorize my captives, calling out each ingredient or dangling it over
their heads before tossing it into my
brew.
Tongue of
porpoise.
Eye of
cuttlefish.
Shell of sea
turtle.
I won’t lie and say watching
their complexions green and bug eyes bulge isn’t a guilty pleasure of mine. For
the moment, however, a wave of generosity—brought on by the mention of my
mother—prompts me to toss them in without my usual theatrics. Each is received
into the cauldron’s wide-mouth drum with a puff of smoke and spray of
sparks.
“As
much as I loved my mother, losing her didn’t drive me to madness as some would
have you believe.” Hearing the melancholy in my tone, I bristle. “Far from it,
in fact. I would have subjected myself to an abysmal existence of the mundane
in honor of her memory. No, it was after the black flags of mourning had been
strung through the kingdom, after the spectacle of her funeral procession had
passed, that my descent began.”
Throwing one final ingredient
into the cauldron, a veil of greasy smoke wafts from its rim. Images begin to
form within the haze: the king’s regal quarters, and a formidable frame seated
in a high-backed chair behind a massive stone
desk.
Crouching down, I position
myself eye level with the miniscule scene unfolding. My tentacles coil into
tight knots beneath me. “This was the night … the night when I was touched by
magic for the very first time … and loathed it to my very
core.”
Within the ghostly image, the
curtain to the king’s quarters is pushed open. A heavy set nursemaid with
stripes of gray in the messy twist of her bun swims in. On one hip she balances
a cherub-faced baby that’s only two months shy of his second birthday. Blond
ringlets halo his head. Both his eyes and cheeks are ruddy from crying. The
frazzled servant’s other hand clings to that of a raven-haired princess who
rubs at her tired, violet eyes with a chubby, toddler
fist.
“If you aren’t following along
yet, that princess is me,” I explain to my captive audience. “The maid softly
shushing my younger self is Loriana. Oh, how dear she was to me. She was a
servant in the castle, tasked with tending to my brother and I. That little
sunset orange tail poking out from behind her belongs to her son, Alastor. He
was Triton’s best friend and would become much more than that to me
...”
“Sire,” respectfully bowing her
head, Loriana readjusted her hold on Prince Triton, “I hate to
interrupt.”
My father, King Poseidon, pushed
his chair back from the desk in a swirl of water and sand, and rose in
greeting. To the rest of the kingdom, he was known as simply the supreme ruler
of Atlantica. To me, and my juvenile ignorance, he was the God of the Sea who
towered over us all. I envisioned all of his enemies, and anyone that ever
wished me harm, falling to their knees and trembling before his commanding
presence. His hair and thick beard were the red of Precious Coral. Muscle
rippled over every inch of his exposed torso. His narrow waist tapered into an
emerald green tail that perfectly matched the shining jewels of his eyes.
Countless times I had examined the lines of his face in search of some
similarity between the two of us. None could be found. Triton had his smile,
and later—when adolescence hit—he would inherit his strong chin. Me? Every inch
of me was a lackluster shadow of my mother’s regal beauty. Where her eyes and
tail sparkled like freshly polished amethyst, mine seemed dull by comparison.
Or, perhaps the lighting from the pedestal I’d built for her in my mind shone
for her with a more flattering
shimmer.
“The hour is late. I welcome the
interruption.” Poseidon set his fish bone quill onto the desk top, and
positioned its stone cradle on top of it. “How can I be of service, Loriana?”
“It’s the children,
Your Highness.” Her face a mask of maternal sorrow, Loriana gave my hand a
quick pulse of comfort. “This is the first night they have ever tried to go to
sleep without a lullaby from their dear mother. I’m afraid I can’t seem to calm
their troubled little hearts.”
Poseidon’s broad chest expanded
with a deep inhalation, and tipping his head he exhaled a flurry of rushing
water and bubbles. “This is a troubling time for us all,” he agreed. Crossing
the room with one stroke of his tail, he extended his hands to receive Triton.
My brother waved his arms in eager delight, wriggling into the security of
Father’s strong embrace. Inching forward, I blinked up at the mighty king. He
floated past without so much as ruffling my hair. “I’m afraid I don’t have your
mother’s gift of song, but perhaps we could sit a spell and find peace in our
togetherness.”
Honoring her position outside of
the room, Loriana gave me a gentle push forward to follow my father. Casting a
tentative glance over my shoulder, I did just that. Poseidon swirled Triton
around, eliciting a giggle that crinkled the corners of his ocean blue eyes,
before the king collapsed on the sea sponge sofa with his darling son on his
lap. I perched on the very edge of the far cushion, uninvited and
unnoticed.
Before that moment our father
had been more of a … hmm, how to put this delicately? A figurehead in our
lives. We knew of him and regarded him fondly, but unfortunately his kingly
duties allowed our primary interactions to be those staged for political
potency. Our mother, the lovely Queen Titonis, spent her days caring for my
brother and I with only Loriana to aid her. Now, Poseidon had no choice but to
pick up the yolk. For Triton this transition seemed to be going swimmingly. I,
however, was getting as much attention as the Orca-bone end
table.
Hands under the little prince’s
pits, Poseidon turned Triton to face him. “I was so proud of how you behaved
during the processional today,” he gushed. “You honored not only me, but your
mother’s memory when you clasped your tiny fist over your heart and held your
head high as her carriage
passed.”
“Follow Nessa.” Triton looked to
me with love, his tailfin a muted clap when connecting with Father’s
lap.
“Your sister has two whole years
of further training and experience than you, my boy.” Poseidon’s shoulders
raised, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. “You exhibited the
poise of a true leader.”
My lips clamped shut to stifle a
sob, his words stinging like a slap. I had just as much right to the throne as
Triton, but this was the first moment I became painfully aware of who he longed
to see succeed him. It would not be the last … or the most
painful.
“She held her curtsy so long,
merfolk threw flowers!” Alastor, a year and a half older and far more eloquent
than Triton, darted into the room to brazenly interject. Mahogany waves curled
over his earlobes, adding dimension to his round little face that resembled a
bubble. The boldness of his gesture quickly shriveled under Father’s menacing
glare.
“The
son of a servant entering the king’s quarters?” Father boomed, one eyebrow
raising in question. “One might question your upbringing,
lad.”
“A thousand apologies, Your
Majesty!” Loriana blushed from her neck clear up to her earlobes and snapped
her fingers at her wandering boy. “Alastor, come here at
once!”
Shoulders
sagging like a stone cast to the depths, Alastor returned to his rightful place
in the hall. The heat of his topaz stare bore into me as he paddled along,
searching for even the slightest acknowledgement of his noble
deed.
I had none to
offer.
My own gaze had drawn away from
my brother, laughing while Father tickled his cheeks with his beard, to scan
the items neatly arranged on father’s desk. Inanimate objects which earned his
attentions daily just by being. On the right side, closest to his scrawling
hand, sat the quill. Its fat little ink pot was perfectly positioned
perpendicular beside it. In the center of the desk, weighted by stones carved
with the royal crest, rested a stack of scrolls awaiting the king’s notice. On
the left-hand corner, Poseidon’s late night snacking needs were met by a plate
of rolled and seasoned seaweed
puffs.
The ink pot lured my attention
back as if calling to me.
I had never had to work for
attention in any capacity. My mother had always given it freely, and in
limitless supply. Since she had been taken from me, I had unquenched needs:
hugs, stories, and all of that … drivel. So, yes, I thought about acting out. I
toyed with the idea of knocking over that little clay pot and letting the ink
flow to ruin the staged perfection of father’s space. More than that, I wanted
to. I wanted to hear him shout out my name in his menacing vibrato, because at
least then he would have to acknowledge me. While my hands stayed folded neatly
in my lap, as the good little mergirl I was, something within me I had never
felt before reached out. Palpable energy, only I seemed privy to, crackled
through the water to cradle the pot in its hold. I could feel it, poised and
ready, awaiting my command. Biting my lower lip to fend off a threatening grin,
my essence gave barely a nudge and the ink pot tumbled. A thick black cloud
exploded over my father’s desk, staining the scrolls and ruining the once
delectable wraps.
“Vanessa!” thundered my father,
rocketing off the sofa. “Look what you’ve
done!”
I turned toward him with feigned
remorse … and screamed. The howl of terror tore from my chest until my gills
ached and my throat was raw.
There was a buzz of activity:
Poseidon calling to the nursemaid, Loriana swimming in as fast as her fins
could carry her, Triton wailing in fear, Alastor trying to shush his friend
from the doorway to which he’d been banished. I neither saw nor heard any of
this.
Floating in the center of the
room, bobbing with the current, was my
mother.
Not the serene vision of
loveliness I had known her to be that was full of life and love. Heck, I even
would’ve happily settled for the slumbering beauty she appeared to be during
her funeral. In vast contrast, the entity hovering before me had chunks of
flesh gnawed away by assorted sea beasts. Cracked, ashen lips curled into a
snarl. Black ooze bubbled through her teeth, dripping from her chin and
clouding the water. My scream reached a fevered pitch, spots dancing before my
eyes. The ghoul, who in life sang me to sleep, reached for me with one hand
that had been gnawed to bone.
You see, by using magic I opened
a door and allowed the darkness in. The cost being more than I could bear, I
vowed to myself—as my consciousness waned—never, ever to dabble with such
things again.
Oh, the lies we tell ourselves
…
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