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Girl Squad Volta by Maya Lin Wang Magical Girl Fantasy Book Header

Mystery Project Reveal!

I wrote a middle grade magical girl fantasy!

Aaaand if you’re still here, I’m going to assume that header didn’t scare you off.

Hi!

So, in previous posts, I referenced a “mystery project” that I promised to publish on some platform under some name before the end of 2022. Since this series will be younger-skewing than my earlier works (yes, even the YA ones), what I’ve decided to do is split my “”brand”” in two. I’ll be continuing to publish adult fantasy and sci-fi under M. L. Wang while publishing YA and MG titles under Maya Lin Wang. The idea is that these names are similar enough that readers can probably remember that they belong to the same author but can also discern whether they’re browsing in their desired demographic.

Without further ado, I give you Maya Lin Wang’s mystery project:

Girl Squad Volta by Maya Lin Cover
Girl Squad Volta cover art by Miss Vie Book Designs

Tagline

Sailor Moon meets Cobra Kai in a sapphic portal fantasy for the scrappy magical girl in all of us.

Summary

For compulsive doodler, Wren, finding out that magical beings exist is a bit of a shock. Finding out that her childhood friend and unrequited crush, Laura, is one of those super beings? Less of a shock. Laura has always seemed supernaturally gifted at everything from school projects, to karate, to writing epic storylines for Wren’s long-running superhero comic.

Before inter-dimensional fairies called Volta brought their rivalry to the sleepy town of Hartwood, Wren’s biggest fear was that Laura would leave her behind for cooler friends when they started high school. Now, as light and dark forces converge on Laura’s burgeoning magical signature, Wren will do anything to protect her friend—magic or none.

Alongside a headstrong sonic-powered Volta named Jackie, Wren must stand up to a team of dark magic users, help Laura realize her latent powers, and maybe find her own strength along the way.

Other Info

Title: Girl Squad Volta
Demographics: YA (Young Adult) & older MG (Middle Grade)
Genres: magical girl, portal fantasy, progression, contemporary fantasy, martial arts, action & adventure, academy fantasy, teen drama, LGBTQ+
For fans of Marissa Meyer, Rick Riordan, Sailor Moon, She-Ra, Avatar, W.I.T.C.H., Winx Club, RWBY, and Karate Kid
Release Date:
 March 1st, 2023 on Amazon
Other relevant links: Maya Lin Newsletter, ARC request form

If Girl Squad doesn’t sound like your thing, not to worry! This project has not and will not affect my Gunpowder Magnolia posting schedule nor the 2023 release of Blood Over Bright Haven. In fact, the only reason I pushed myself to finish Girl Squad as fast as I did (aside from it being fun) was that I was disappointed with having to delay Bright Haven until next year and wanted to have something to show for my 2022.

If you’re not sure from the above info whether this is a book you’ll enjoy, I’ve included a short sample at the end of this post. Also…

The ENTIRE FIRST BOOK is available to read on Wattpad and Ao3 until the end of 2022

(Yes, I’m counting this as “publishing” a book in 2022; let me have this). If you enjoy the free Girl Squad content, you can subscribe to my Maya Lin Newsletter to get updates on the official release and/or apply for an ARC (Advanced Reader Copy), which brings me to…

The exciting thing about the ARCs:

Since Girl Squad Book 1 is already available in its entirety online, the ARCs I send out before release will be an omnibus that includes Book 1, Book 2, and Book 3 of the series. I’ll be providing a limited number of these omnibus eARCs and an even more limited number of physical ARCs. If you’d like to be considered for one or both, you can apply here.

A note on my existing titles:

Before Girl Squad Volta releases, I’ll be taking my two YA books in the Theonite universe (Theonite: Planet Adyn and Theonite: Orbit) off my Amazon page. You’ll probably still be able to buy the paperbacks from third-party sellers for some time after that; I just won’t be selling them as ebooks anymore. This is for two reasons:

First, I’m not really happy with the contents of those books anymore and, consequently, don’t feel great collecting passive income from them (even if it’s pennies compared to what I get from Kaigen).

Second, as I explained above, I’m trying to separate my YA and adult works into the Maya Lin and M. L. catalogues respectively. This means that, if I do republish those first two Theonite books in some form, I would want them to be under Maya Lin, not M. L. In general (and I do mean in general; if you’re an exception to the rule, that’s awesome and I obviously love that, but you are the exception) my Sword of Kaigen readers are not interested in my YA Theonite books and vice versa. By the same token, I don’t see Girl Squad Volta and Blood Over Bright Haven sharing a significant audience, so I think it’s better for all if I keep the two sub-brands distinct from one another.

With that in mind, I know that most of you who read this blog found me through The Sword of Kaigen, so I will be neither shocked nor offended if you don’t run in droves to pick up Girl Squad. Part of the reason I held off on announcing the new pen name was so that I could have a head start building a younger readership through other avenues. However, if there’s a kid (or inner child) in your life who likes high-stakes martial arts action but also sparkly dresses and earnest teen drama, consider this book for her… or him, or them. All are welcome

Girl Squad Volta Sample

When you first become a dark cosmic entity, the mortals do all this handwringing about how you got to be that way. But give it time, eat a couple galaxies, and they forget that you were ever one of them. I suppose it’s the kind of thought that soothes the tiny mind: That could never be me. I would never…

But the truth is that all great and terrifying beings in the multiverse were once babies. I, for one, was a frumpy little girl who loved drawing comic book characters with great boots, long capes, and big swords.

Naturally, this was before I actually saw a sword in action. When you’re a nine-year-old sketching the sweep of that katana, you’re not thinking about what that sharp edge is really for. You’re not thinking about how much blood comes out of a person with a flash of that steel through flesh. At least, I never thought about it until I was fourteen years old, watching Shademare of the Xin Volta drag her katana across a man’s throat.

I screamed.

Or I think I did. At that point, I couldn’t really hear anything over the shrill “oh no, oh no, oh no!” of my own internal monologue.

The smoky tendrils that formed Shademare’s dress lapped at the dying man like snake tongues, absorbing what little energy was left in his body. His life force vanished into her ink-black aura like starlight into a black hole. The hand on his trident went limp, and the weapon slipped from his grip to clatter down the rocks into the sea.

Quenched, Shademare let out a sound of satisfaction and cast the guy’s armored body after his weapon—like an empty soda can. I flinched as he crashed limply off the rocks to break the waves in a froth of foam and blood.

“Well, Wren Li-Lazzaro.” Shademare turned her gaze on me, eyes steely cold beneath the hacked line of her bangs. “Looks like it’s just you and me.”

Panic set my brain jittering in circles like a busted wind-up toy. Twenty feet of seething ocean separated me from Shademare, but I didn’t think for a moment that a little water was going to slow her down. I took a step back, my bare foot slipped on the wet volcanic rock, and she let out a chuckle.

“If you want to fly away, I won’t mind. That is, if those newbie wings will even carry you.”

Oh god, would my wings carry me? They’d get me into the air, sure, but not fast enough to escape a Volta like Shademare.

“Go on.” She smirked. “I won’t follow. What I really want is behind you.”

That should have been my cue to make a break for it. Instead, the words made every muscle in me clench. They reminded me why I was there: to protect what was behind me.

I met Shademare’s eyes, planted my feet, and breathed in power. Energy burned a pair of lines against my shoulder blades and rushed to fill my chest. When I breathed out, my aura flared purple around me—for all the good it would do me.

“Are you sure about this?” Shademare sounded as amused as she was surprised. “You know you don’t have the power to fight me.”

She was right, of course. My few hundred volts were no match for her nine thousand—or whatever the heck she was at after magically cannibalizing that guardsman. But not every fight had to come down to raw power. Eight years of karate had taught me that much.

Hernandez Sensei said that most martial arts weapons were just farm tools, adapted to fight well-trained, well-armed samurai tax collectors… I spread my fingers at my sides, visualizing steel, mentally sketching the arcs of twin sickles. The glow of my aura raced to my hands and concentrated there, ready to fill the shapes in my mind.

At my limited power level, a Volta had to choose between flight, shielding, and summoning. Forming weapons would mean fighting Shademare grounded and unarmored. But what difference would that make, really? At its strongest, my aura wouldn’t protect me from Shademare’s blade any more than a denim jacket would protect me from… well… a regular katana. It didn’t matter how I allotted my voltage; if Shademare got a decisive cut in, I was fish food.

“Are you trying to summon?” Shademare laughed as a tendril of her dress wiped the blood from her katana and flicked it into the sea.

Some martial arts historians disputed the claim that kamas had originated as farmers’ sickles, but in that moment, I wanted to believe that a peasant could stand down a samurai in full armor. I needed to believe it, or this was never going to work.

“Do you even know how to manifest a weapon?”

I should have said something badass like ‘Come and find out,’ but that’s the kind of thing I tend to think of way after the fact. Instead of wasting breath, I set my stance and glared in challenge. Like the idiot I was.

Wings flicked like switchblades from Shademare’s shoulders, and she shot toward me, the tip of her blade slicing a spray through the waves.

I lifted my hands—and summoned steel.

Pre-order the ebook on Amazon
Request an omnibus ARC

I wrote a middle grade magical girl fantasy! Aaaand if you're still here, I'm going to assume that header didn't scare you off. Hi! So,…

Continue reading → Mystery Project Reveal!

THE SWORD OF KAIGEN has hit 2,000 reviews & is on sale!

Get THE SWORD OF KAIGEN ebook on sale for $2.49!

Back when I started publishing on Amazon, I thought that indie authors who could get their books to 100 Amazon reviews were basically wizards. To be clear, I still think that 100 reviews is an amazing target to hit, which is why it boggles my mind that The Sword of Kaigen is currently sitting at 20 times that. Thank you so much to all of you who reviewed on any platform, buzzed on social media, recommended the book to your friends, all that. This wouldn’t have happened without you.

I was planning to run a sale to celebrate reaching 2,000 reviews. As it turns out, I agreed to a Prime Deal a while back and, as a result, Amazon has already put The Sword of Kaigen ebook on sale for $2.49 through July 31st. So, if you haven’t picked up a copy, now is a good time.

Thank you again for 2,000 reviews!

Get THE SWORD OF KAIGEN ebook on sale for $2.49! Back when I started publishing on Amazon, I thought that indie authors who could get…

Continue reading → THE SWORD OF KAIGEN has hit 2,000 reviews & is on sale!

I lied to you…

Writing and release schedule update:

Back in May of 2021, I told you that I would have a dark academia novella called Blood Over Bright Haven coming out in late 2021 or early 2022. When I made that post, Bright Haven was a draft of 40,000 words and I was planning to publish it with only a quick edit. Well, in subsequent drafts, the story swelled to 100,000 words (no longer novella-length by any means) and grew into something that is going to need a more comprehensive professional edit. Consequently, I’ve pushed the release of this now-novel into 2023.

You can now pre-order Blood Over Bright Haven here. The tentative release date of June 1st, 2023 is subject to change in the rare event that I get ahead of schedule.

Blood Over Bright Haven by ML Wang Cover

If you’re interested in receiving a review copy of Bright Haven, you can email me at ml@mlwangbooks.com and I’ll add you to my list of folks to be notified when ARCs are available.

For those who were wondering, I do remember the post where I said that I wanted to publish something new before the end of 2022. That actually brings me to my next bit of news…

New Mystery Project!

As Bright Haven outgrew its bounds, I didn’t want to sacrifice my goal of publishing a new book in 2022. To that end, I’ve drafted a trilogy of short (and actually to stay that way!) YA fantasy books. Because these books are aimed at a very different audience from my current readership, I’m going to publish the first one under a new pen name, which I will later make known to my usual readers. The complete first book will be available to read on some platform—if not on Amazon, then on a serialized fiction platform like Wattpad—in the coming months, and I’ll be letting you know where to find it via my usual channels before the end of 2022 : )

If you’re into girly younger-skewing YA and you’d be interested in an ARC of this mystery project, you can email me (still at ml@mlwangbooks.com) and I’ll get you on my notification list for that.

If you’re not interested in YA and July of ‘23 seems like a long time to wait for Bright Haven, I’m still publishing monthly chapters of my slow-burn military fantasy, Gunpowder Magnolia, to my newsletter and Patreon (fourteen chapters available as of this posting). I also have a short story called “Death in the Uncanny Valley” in The Alchemy of Sorrow, which is currently available for pre-order here.

Time to get personal

To leave off, I want to apologize for going so long without publishing anything. I’m starting to realize that, for all my improvements to my productivity, the fact that I get words on the page every day, and my consistent love of the writing process, I have a mental block around actually finishing a project. That is not just getting through the last chapter (I can do that) but calling a project “finished” and sending it off. Part of this comes from a happy place, the joy of tinkering; I like working on a story far better than I like being done with it, so I resist that second part. 

The other more subconscious barrier is probably anxiety. Here, when drafting this post, I made the mistake of trying to psychoanalyze my own hang-ups surrounding publishing, and man, does that get incomprehensible and navel-gazey real quick! So, suffice to say that having people read my books triggers my anxiety like nothing else—the more eyeballs the worse the symptoms. It’s silly, considering that reader eyeballs are what makes my writing career viable in the first place, but that’s how my dumb brain works.

One thing that soothes my nerves is working on more than one (or two, or three) projects at once. It disperses the stakes and makes me feel less like the thing I’m working on at this moment could make or break my career. The plus side of this coping mechanism is obvious: I now have a lot more books in progress across a lot more sub-genres, increasing the likelihood that something you, dear reader, will personally enjoy is around the corner. The downside is also obvious: it’s harder to finish one project when you’re working on five.

I’ll continue to look for a happy middle-ground between creative satisfaction and quick output. In the meantime, as always, I appreciate you all bearing with me!

Writing and release schedule update: Back in May of 2021, I told you that I would have a dark academia novella called Blood Over Bright…

Continue reading → I lied to you…

Final Cover Reveal & Ebook Pre-Order for THE ALCHEMY OF SORROW

The Alchemy of Sorrow will be out this November!

As I blogged back in February (can you use the verb “blog” that way? I’m doing it) myself and twelve other authors have been putting together a sci-fi and fantasy anthology centered on the themes of grief, healing, and hope. Last time I posted, the project was still funding on Kickstarter and we hadn’t settled on a final cover design or public release date. Hence this follow-up to share the official cover, pre-order link, and release date for those who missed the Kickstarter.

My entry in the anthology, “Death in the Uncanny Valley”, is my first and probably last ever stab at writing a video game story, so if that sounds interesting, you might want to grab a copy. If that doesn’t get you hype, I would mention that my fellow authors were considerably more ambitious and personal with their stories than I was. On the basis of their excellent work, I do still recommend that you pre-order a copy.

Below the divider, you’ll find the official pre-order info and cover reveal post.

Book Description

Here be dragons and sorcery, time travel and sorrow.
Vicious garden gnomes. A grounded phoenix rider. A new mother consumed with vengeance. A dying god. Soul magic.
These stories wrestle with the experience of loss—of loved ones, of relationships, of a sense of self, of health—and forge a path to hope as characters fight their way forward.
From bestsellers and SPFBO finalists to rising voices, 13 exceptionally talented authors explore the many facets of grief and healing through the lens of fantasy and sci-fi. 

Title: The Alchemy of Sorrow
Public release date: Nov. 1st 2022
ISBNs for all editions: eBook – 978-1-952667-92-3, Hardcover –  978-1-952667-93-0, Paperback – 978-1-952667-94-7, Audiobook – 978-1-952667-95-4 
Editors: Sarah Chorn – lead editor, Virginia McClain – acquiring editor/coordinator
Authors: M.L. Wang, K.S. Villoso, Intisar Khanani, Sonya M. Black, Angela Boord, Levi Jacobs, Krystle Matar, Virginia McClain, Quenby Olson, Carol A. Park, Madolyn Rogers, Rachel Emma Shaw & Clayton Snyder
Publisher: Crimson Fox Publishing
Ebook Pre-Order Link: https://books2read.com/AoS
Print and audio pre-orders coming soon!

About the Cover Design

For the cover of The Alchemy of Sorrow, we wanted to create an image that was evocative of all the stories contained within its pages, without being specific to any single one of them. 

Since most of our stories have female protagonists, we chose to center the image on a grieving woman. We wanted her to be a woman of color, to celebrate the diversity of our stories and authors, and to represent the majority of the world’s population. We asked the artist to portray her standing among ruins, with her grief transmuting into light, which in turn begins to transform her surroundings. 

We also took inspiration from the Japanese practice of kintsugi – in which a fractured piece of pottery is restored using precious metals mixed into the lacquer so that the item’s cracks become a beautiful feature of the piece rather than a flaw to be hidden away – and we asked if the woman’s skin could feature cracks lined with gold.

From those sketchy details, Zoe Badini conceived of this stunning image of a woman standing before a broken stained-glass window, with light coming from the cracks in her skin. The light forms swallows, a symbol of rebirth, and renews the dying jasmine around her. 

The cover illustration for The Alchemy of Sorrow. Image description: to the right of the image (the front cover) a woman of color stands before a broken stained glass window. Her body is riddled with glowing golden cracks. A pair of similarly glowing swallows flitter above her hands, held at chest level. She is surrounded by dead vines that curl around the window as well–here and there, a few glowing golden flowers are blooming. To the left of the image (the back cover), a pair of glowing swallows face each other in midair, framed by a few glowing flowers. The rest of the cover shows dead vines and a sense of decay, including a broken ewer.

After receiving Zoe’s gorgeous artwork, the task then went to Virginia to design a text layout that didn’t detract from it. She did her best to convey all the information necessary and make it legible without obscuring too much of the artwork.

The back cover text reads as follows “Here be dragons and sorcery, time travel and sorrow.
Vicious garden gnomes. A grounded phoenix rider. A new mother consumed with vengeance. A dying god. Soul magic.
These stories wrestle with the experience of loss—of loved ones, of relationships, of a sense of self, of health—and forge a path to hope as characters fight their way forward.
From bestsellers and SPFBO finalists to rising voices, 13 exceptionally talented authors explore the many facets of grief and healing through the lens of fantasy and sci-fi.” And below that it reads “Find out more at books2read.com/rl/alchemyofsorrow” and then next to the ISBN Barcode it says in small white text “Cover Illustration by Zoe Badini ©2022, Cover Design VM Designs ©2022”)The cover art for The Alchemy of Sorrow. Image description: to the right of the image (the front cover) a woman of color stands before a broken stained glass window. Her body is riddled with glowing golden cracks. A pair of similarly glowing swallows flitter above her hands, held at chest level. She is surrounded by dead vines that curl around the window as well–here and there, a few glowing golden flowers are blooming. To the left of the image (the back cover), a pair of glowing swallows face each other in midair, framed by a few glowing flowers. The rest of the cover shows dead vines and a sense of decay, including a broken ewer.

The text laid out across the front cover reads “The Alchemy of Sorrow” in gold across the top with a portion of the text hidden behind the woman’s head but still legible. Below that in white, the subtitle “A Fantasy & Sci-Fi Anthology of Grief & Hope” and below that, “ M.L. Wang, K.S. Villoso, Intisar Khanani, Sonya M. Black, Angela Boord, Levi Jacobs, Krystle Matar, Virginia McClain, Quenby Olson, Carol A. Park, Madolyn Rogers, Rachel Emma Shaw & Clayton Snyder” below that “Edited by Sarah Chorn & Virginia McClain”

The spine of the paperback layout shows the publishing logo for Crimson Fox Publishing the the bottom in a light gold color, above that the names Chorn and McClain written in white are separated by a pair of swallows depicted in line art in a light gold color. And above that “The Alchemy of Sorrow” is written out in a stylized font to match the front cover.
The cover art for The Alchemy of Sorrow. Image description: to the right of the image (the front cover) a woman of color stands before a broken stained glass window. Her body is riddled with glowing golden cracks. A pair of similarly glowing swallows flitter above her hands, held at chest level. She is surrounded by dead vines that curl around the window as well–here and there, a few glowing golden flowers are blooming. To the left of the image (the back cover), a pair of glowing swallows face each other in midair, framed by a few glowing flowers. The rest of the cover shows dead vines and a sense of decay, including a broken ewer.

The text laid out across the front cover reads “The Alchemy of Sorrow” in gold across the top with a portion of the text hidden behind the woman’s head but still legible. Below that in white, the subtitle “A Fantasy & Sci-Fi Anthology of Grief & Hope” and below that, “ M.L. Wang, K.S. Villoso, Intisar Khanani, Sonya M. Black, Angela Boord, Levi Jacobs, Krystle Matar, Virginia McClain, Quenby Olson, Carol A. Park, Madolyn Rogers, Rachel Emma Shaw & Clayton Snyder” below that “Edited by Sarah Chorn & Virginia McClain”

The spine of the paperback layout shows the publishing logo for Crimson Fox Publishing the the bottom in a light gold color, above that the names Chorn and McClain written in white are separated by a pair of swallows depicted in line art in a light gold color. And above that “The Alchemy of Sorrow” is written out in a stylized font to match the front cover.
The cover art for The Alchemy of Sorrow. Image description: to the right of the image (the front cover) a woman of color stands before a broken stained glass window. Her body is riddled with glowing golden cracks. A pair of similarly glowing swallows flitter above her hands, held at chest level. She is surrounded by dead vines that curl around the window as well–here and there, a few glowing golden flowers are blooming.

The text laid out across the ebook cover reads “The Alchemy of Sorrow” in gold across the top with a portion of the text hidden behind the woman’s head but still legible. Below that in white, the subtitle “A Fantasy & Sci-Fi Anthology of Grief & Hope” and below that, “ M.L. Wang, K.S. Villoso, Intisar Khanani, Sonya M. Black, Angela Boord, Levi Jacobs, Krystle Matar, Virginia McClain, Quenby Olson, Carol A. Park, Madolyn Rogers, Rachel Emma Shaw & Clayton Snyder” below that “Edited by Sarah Chorn & Virginia McClain”

If you want to keep up with all of my ongoing projects, you can subscribe to my newsletter and/or support me on Patreon.

The Alchemy of Sorrow will be out this November! As I blogged back in February (can you use the verb "blog" that way? I'm doing…

Continue reading → Final Cover Reveal & Ebook Pre-Order for THE ALCHEMY OF SORROW

The 99c SPFBO Finalist Sale is Here Again!

The SPFBO finalist super sale is on again from February 25th – 28th!

For those who weren’t following SPFBO and/or my blog last year, this sale includes current and past finalist titles in Mark Lawrence’s Self-Publish Fantasy Blog-off. This year, I’m extra excited to have ALL previous winners (Michael McClung, Jonathan French, Rob J. Hayes, J. Zachary Pike, me!, and Justin Lee Anderson) participating, as well as a lot of brand new finalists. We have titles representing a vast array of fantasy genres, all for 99c each, so be sure to visit the list before the 28th and grab whatever looks good to you!

Browse All 40+ Books >>

The SPFBO finalist super sale is on again from February 25th - 28th! For those who weren't following SPFBO and/or my blog last year, this…

Continue reading → The 99c SPFBO Finalist Sale is Here Again!

I’m in an anthology!

13 Fantasy & Sci-fi Stories of Grief and Healing

One of the projects I recently announced to my newsletter and Patreon is a 7,000-word piece titled “Death in the Uncanny Valley”. I wrote this sci-fi short for The Alchemy of Sorrow, an upcoming SFF anthology organized by Virginia McClain (SPFBO 2019 finalist and author of Blade’s Edge). The project will (hopefully) be funded through a Kickstarter, which just went live today!

Back the project >>

For those interested, here’s the little intro to my story I wrote for the Kickstarter page:

“Death in the Uncanny Valley” sprang from my fascination with nostalgia, digital space, and physical distance. I think all of us have a place from childhood that brings old feelings to the surface whenever we revisit it. I wanted to explore the ways this experience might evolve as the modern world puts ever greater physical distance between loved ones and more of the “places” we share become digital spaces.

This is a fancy way of saying “I’ve never written a video game story before… and I wanted to try writing a video game story.” Not my wheelhouse, but we’ll see how it turned out. And I expect my fellow authors’ stories will more than carry the anthology.

Other participating authors include:

  • Intisar Khanani (author of Thorn)
  • K.S. Villoso (author of The Wolf of Oren-Yaro)
  • Krystle Matar (author of Legacy of the Brightwash)
  • Clayton Snyder (author of Norylska Groans)
  • Rachel Emma Shaw (author of Last Memoria)
  • Angela Boord (author of Fortune’s Fool)
  • Levi Jacobs (author of Daughter of Flood and Fury)
  • Sonya M. Black (author of A Sea of Broken Glass)
  • Carol A. Park (author of The Heretic Gods)
  • Madolyn Rogers (author of The Copper Assassin)
  • Quenby Olson (author of Miss Percy’s Pocket Guide to the Care and Feeding of British Dragons)

With editing by Sarah Chorn, illustration by Kerstin Espinosa Rosero, and cover art by Zoe Badini. You can find more about these lovely people, their contributions, and potential backer rewards on our Kickstarter page.

If you want to keep up with all of my ongoing projects, you can subscribe to my newsletter and/or support me on Patreon.

13 Fantasy & Sci-fi Stories of Grief and Healing One of the projects I recently announced to my newsletter and Patreon is a 7,000-word piece…

Continue reading → I’m in an anthology!

2022 Goals & Projects

This year, we thrive!

Last January, I rolled my previous (2020) retrospective into a plan for the coming year, figuring the best way to see where I was going was to look at where I’d been. I started writing a blog post in the same format for this year, but it turned out to be super boring because… well… aside from minor adjustments to my serial chapter release schedule and the charities I wanted to support, I met all my goals. While I’m obviously glad that I crushed my resolutions, going down a list and patting myself on the back for each item would make for a boring post.

Upon reflection, I was very much in survival mode these past two and a half years. The world was uncertain, my mental health was precarious, and I needed to set attainable goals that would move me forward psychologically. I think that the difference this year is that the self-care and gentle goal-setting has paid off. I’ve graduated from survival mode. At the risk of jinxing it, I might go as far as to say that I’m thriving. I’m in career mode now. And I want to ride that momentum forward, with my eyes on where I’m going.

2022 Goals

Publish two projects

One of these will be my dark academia novel, Blood Over Bright Haven. The other won’t be a full-length novel, but I’m hoping for a novella, maybe? I’ll definitely have at least one short story coming out in an anthology this year. If all else fails, I’ll have to count that toward the total. But I will be publishing a minimum of two new projects this year after a long dry spell, which has me excited.

New Patreon tiers

Currently, I only have a $1 tier and a $3 tier on my Patreon, both of which entitle the patron to digital rewards like early access to artwork and serial chapters. Through surveys of my Patreon and newsletter, I’ve confirmed that there is interest in higher tiers that offer physical rewards. Originally, I planned to launch these new tiers at the beginning the new year. But since some of those planned higher tiers include “all published books to date” in either ebook or physical form, I wanted to wait until I had something to offer in addition to the same three books I’ve been selling since early 2019. So, look for $5 – $35 tiers later this year!

Keep up my current writing pace

At the beginning of 2021, I set a goal of 2-3 finished chapters per month. I ended up absolutely decimating that goal by not only starting but completing an unplanned 80,000-word novel (Blood Over Bright Haven, which I originally conceived as a novella) in addition to my planned serial chapters. One day, I hope to write as fast as some of my peers, but at my current skill and energy level, I’ll be delighted if I can sustain this pace through 2022.

My Ongoing Projects

Not much new here since my previous blog posts. There will be other stuff coming up in 2022. I just can’t announce it yet.

Blood Over Bright Haven

(Gaslamp fantasy, dark academia)

The first woman ever admitted to an ancient order of mages uncovers a secret that could change magic forever—if it doesn’t get her killed first.

I’m in the middle of sending my second draft to a team of early readers one chapter at a time (12 of 22 chapters sent so far). After their feedback is in, the story will get another edit or two before I publish.

Goodreads page >>

Gunpowder Magnolia

(Flintlock military fantasy, political intrigue, romance)

Gunpowder Magnolia preliminary cover

A battalion that was never supposed to see combat faces a magic that was never supposed to exist, setting multiple kingdoms on a collision course.

I’m currently releasing this as a serial through my newsletter and Patreon. Eventually, the full story will be published as a trilogy.

Read sample chapter >>

Sazuma

(Flintlock fantasy, political intrigue, mystery)

Sazuma preliminary book cover

All secrets in the matriarchal state of Sazuma move through the spy guild. When the most powerful spies among them turn both knives and secrets against each other, the ensuing chaos shakes the state to its roots.

An early draft of Sazuma is also being serialized (albeit much more slowly than Gunpowder Magnolia) through my Patreon.

Read sample chapter >>

Seven Forsaken

(Flintlock fantasy, adventure)

Seven Forsaken preliminary cover

A shape-shifting priest-turned-mercenary makes his way through the aftermath of a plague that took everything from him.

Seven Forsaken was my first serial post-Sword of Kaigen. While it is currently on hiatus to make more room for Gunpowder, it is not abandoned. I’m still very excited to return to it when my schedule opens up again.

Read sample chapter >>

As I said above, I’ve also got some mystery projects going in the background. You’ll know more about those as they take shape—if they take shape.

Thanks for reading and best of luck to all of you with your own goals in the new year!

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This year, we thrive! Last January, I rolled my previous (2020) retrospective into a plan for the coming year, figuring the best way to see…

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GUNPOWDER MAGNOLIA is now free to read!

In August, I informed my patrons and newsletter subscribers that I was putting my monthly serial, Seven Forsaken, on hiatus. My main reasons were a) I had been struggling with the direction of Seven Forsaken and b) I was burning out just a bit trying to keep three serials running simultaneously.

To replace Seven Forsaken, I bumped the more popular of my Patreon serials, Gunpowder Magnolia, up to a monthly (instead of once-every-two-months) release schedule and have started releasing it for free to the newsletter.

So, this is what the new release schedule looks like:

  • Newsletter Subscribers get a chapter of Gunpowder Magnolia every month.
  • $1 patrons get the same chapter of Gunpowder Magnolia two or more days ahead of the newsletter and 3-4 chapters behind the $3 patrons.
  • $3 patrons get a new chapter of Gunpowder Magnolia EVERY month (instead of once every two months) in addition to a Sazuma chapter once every two months.
  • Seven Forsaken will pick back up as soon as one of the other serials has run its course or when I feel like I have the space to competently execute three simultaneous serials again.

More about Gunpowder Magnolia

At the edge of an empire, a battalion that was never supposed to see combat faces a magic that was never supposed to exist.

Gunpowder Magnolia is probably the closest thing I’ve got to a Sword of Kaigen successor. At least as far as swords, warfare, themes of family, and loosely East Asian inspiration. Other than that, it’s a very different story—broader in scope, heavier on political intrigue, more traditional in structure—but if you loved the battles and weapons of SoK, I’m hoping you’ll enjoy this one too.

When Gunpowder is a finished book, it will involve 2-3 converging POVs that fully flesh out the magical and political conflicts of the story. The serial version will largely only include the main POV. This should create a linear and complete story that I can later contextualize through the accompanying POVs in the final product.

You can read the first chapter here!

What about Seven Forsaken?

Despite some rough patches, I’m actually still very excited about my weird snake-shifter serial. Far from being down on it, I have a lot of ideas for revamping the plot, improving the pacing, and making slight changes to those early chapters that will make the story stronger going forward. Hopefully, the hiatus gives those ideas the time they need to marinate. In the meantime, the fourteen chapters I’ve already published will remain available to my patrons and newsletter subscribers.

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In August, I informed my patrons and newsletter subscribers that I was putting my monthly serial, Seven Forsaken, on hiatus. My main reasons were a)…

Continue reading → GUNPOWDER MAGNOLIA is now free to read!

SAZUMA (Patreon Serial) Sample Chapter

Sazuma is a serialized story that I publish once every even month to my $3 patrons on Patreon (with my other serial, Gunpowder Magnolia, falling on the odd months). It takes place in my new flintlock fantasy universe, Altima, along with Gunpowder Magnolia, Seven Forsaken, and Blood Over Bright Haven.

The following is a sample chapter for those curious about what I’ve been up to behind the paywall. I hope you enjoy!

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SAZUMA

Chapter 1: Breath and Blood

The night breathed, as it always did in Sazuma. The sigh of wind through the sky canopy usually brought calm. Tonight, it just made Zahn hyper-aware of his own breathing, his own heartbeat too hard against his ribs. It had been six years since he had killed anyone with his own hands, and he had never killed a woman.

Get it together, Zahn, he willed himself as he slunk along Sazuma’s roots toward his target. It’s just another job. This was one of several mantras he had run through in the past hour, including, ‘You have no choice,’ ‘It’s probably for a good reason,’ and ‘You’ve killed before, idiot. Calm down.’ None had done anything to loosen the knot of dread in his stomach.

Only late-shift workers walked the winding pavebark at this time of night, weary shapes trudging home beneath the glow of street lanterns. Part of Zahn wanted one of the golden-haired tactomancers to spot him and cry out in alarm. Maybe the delay would mean that he had to put the hit off for one more day, give Winnow Han-Madrom one more day to live.

But stalking through this part of Sazuma was tragically easy. Zahn had done most of his training in the city’s upper districts, where tactomages kept every inch of wood carefully manicured, gathering roots into clean edges, wide windows, and broad streets. Here, in the lower districts, residents couldn’t afford to have tactomages in for maintenance more than once a year, so the roots grew as they willed, tangling into uneven rooftops, snarls of shadow, and narrow walkways smoothed only by foot traffic.

A pattering rush from the west made Zahn think of rain. But there was no precipitation out here in the Wilds. Just the wind that periodically swept in from the desert through Sazuma’s canopy, making leaves swarm from her branches and berries drop like rain. The tiny, nut-like fruits pelted onto the pathways between houses, bouncing, rolling, and gathering in corners. A few pinged off Zahn’s left arm and he pulled his cloak over it to muffle the sound. As he neared his destination, he sheathed his climbing daggers and crept onward on his feet and right hand, not wanting to risk the scrape of metal on bark alerting his prey—though the cascade of berries would likely cover the sound, even if he did slip up.

Gray shapes jumped in the night around Zahn—lemurs descending from the rooftops to take advantage of the windfall—and, for once, Zahn didn’t envy their speed. At dawn, Sazuma’s urchins would pick over what the lemurs had left behind, cleaning the streets to the last berry. Before the sun was high, each morsel would be stripped of its unpalatable shell and traded to the merchants in exchange for the sustenance the orphans needed to forage another day. Many of the agents in Zahn’s guild had gotten their start collecting berries or searching out rarer foods for Sazuma’s merchants. He made a note to ask his co-spies if they regretted the promotion now. Because at the moment, he would have given anything to be crawling for berries or climbing for birds’ eggs. How did you go from a thief of food to a thief of human life?

By the time Zahn reached his destination, his heartbeat had grown physically painful, a steel hammer on the inside of his chest that sounded to him like it should wake all Sazuma. His chosen point of ambush was an overgrown rooftop overlooking an alley—the narrowest on his target’s route home. If she had friends with her, the single-file space would allow Zahn to separate them and take them one at a time.

The most difficult thing about hunting women was getting them alone. Men of Sazuma drifted, making them easy to catch alone. But the women, Zahn was learning, were nearly impossible to isolate. He had tailed Winnow han-Madrom for a week and not once had she moved more than a few feet from her fellows. When she wasn’t walking to and from the mines with her friends, she was swinging her pick alongside other workers, cooking with her mother, playing with her nieces and nephews, or sleeping nestled among her sisters.

Zahn shook his head, doing his best not to think about Winnow’s family, about the way her nieces cuddled close to her during storytime and the way she made her baby nephew howl with laughter.

In Daraxes, he had grown up with the idea that men were supposed to protect women… But he wasn’t in Daraxes, he reminded himself, and resisting his superiors would do nothing to save Winnow. If he wasn’t up to the job, the boss would assign it to someone else—possibly someone weaker, who would take a painfully long time in the killing, possibly someone meaner, who wouldn’t mind drawing it out for a laugh. Winnow would die one way or another. At least Zahn had the raw physical power to make it quick.

Sinking back into a shadow, he pulled his spy’s cloak around him to hide the glint off his arm and unfastened the clasps at his shoulders, so that the cloak would drop free when he moved. The dark garment was beautifully effective at masking a spy’s movements through the night, but during combat, it just got in the way. Drawing his dagger, he went still to wait.

Tonight, Winnow was back late. There were only two friends instead of the usual four. Both were women, though that wouldn’t necessarily make Zahn’s job easier.

“I was thinking of a nice dress,” Nelen said as the group plodded within earshot of Zahn’s hiding place. By this time, he had learned the names of all Winnow’s co-workers and come to know their voices. “That’s a classic nameday present.”

“You think we can pool enough for a nice dress?” Korrik said wearily.

“Okay, a nice shirt.”

“She works with us,” Winnow laughed as the three dirt-stained miners turned into the alley. “Where would she wear a nice anything?”

Zahn had stopped breathing. The world narrowed to the three exhausted women as they trudged up the alley, one heavy step at a time.

From his vantage, he could just make out the hue of their skin. Sazuman godmarks took the form of golden freckles, which started appearing in early childhood and then multiplied continuously with age. The miners, being nearly middle-aged, had dense clouds of gold around their eyes, with a sparser scattering across the lower face, neck, and the rest of the body. Those freckles glowed, even in dim light; the richer the gold, the more energy a person was packing. After a day of hard labor, these three were dimmed but not completely spent. There was still enough gold in them for a fight.

“Well, we can’t let her nameday pass again without giving her something,” Nelen said.

They were almost beneath Zahn now, Winnow in the lead, followed by Korrik, followed by Nelen, three golden heads of curls, dulled with dust.

“Hey,” Winnow said, “what about a new lamp? She always—”

Zahn dropped to the alley.

And, blessedly, muscle memory took over. The climbing dagger was buried in Winnow’s side before anyone managed a cry of surprise. She staggered back, lips parted in shock, clutching at the hilt, and Zahn turned to face the other two miners. Had he not followed these women for days, he might have expected them to run, but he knew better than to hope for that. He knew how much they loved each other.

Korrik had already called out to Nelen and reached for her hand. The first thing any Sazuman did when threatened was to reach for her nearest sister, an impulse Zahn had found bizarre before he came to understand tactomancy. If they touched, Nelen would be able to pour her energy into Korrik, giving her twice the strength of a normal woman.

But Zahn was ahead of them, slamming his right elbow into Korrik’s temple before Nelen’s fingers found hers. She crashed into the gnarled alley wall and crumpled, unconscious.

“Korrik!” Nelen gasped and then came at Zahn with her pickaxe.

He ducked the swing and, when the pick stuck in the alley wall, darted into the opening.

“No!” Nelen raised a hand in defense—which was a serious threat in Sazuma. A moment of skin-to-skin contact and she could suck the strength from Zahn’s body. If her tactomancy was powerful enough, she could even kill him.

Of course, Zahn had trained to avoid those touches, and he angled his body as he went for the punch. Nelen’s outstretched fingers brushed his sleeve without ever meeting skin and his right fist crashed hard into her temple. The blow knocked her to the ground where she lay, moaning and barely conscious, too dazed to rise.

“Stop it!” a voice choked and Zahn turned to find Winnow facing him.

God, no, Zahn thought miserably. Please, no.

Horrifyingly, Winnow was back on her feet, still alive—gasping for breath, gushing blood, but still alive. She had pulled the dagger from her ribs and was holding it before her, ready to fight.

“They’re innocent.” Blood dribbled from Winnow’s mouth as she growled, “Don’t touch them!” Barely able to stand with the fatal stab wound in her side, Winnow fell as much as lunged toward Zahn.

On reflex, he spun, extending a leg as he dropped beneath the clumsy swing of the dagger, and knocked Winnow’s feet from under her. She went down hard, pavebark slamming the breath from her body. As she arched, wheezed, and coughed blood, Zahn scrambled onto her and pinned her down, careful to keep his right hand high on her arm where her sleeve prevented skin-to-skin contact.

Even stabbed and winded, Winnow refused to relinquish the knife—which presented a problem. Zahn couldn’t wrest the dagger from her without touching her hand, nor could he let go of her to draw his other knife without giving her an opening to grab for his exposed skin. Either way, he risked death by tactomancy.

All he could do was hold her down until she died.

She had clamped a frantic grip around his left forearm, clearly intent on draining him, but it didn’t work. A tactomancer could only sap a person’s strength through skin-to-skin contact and Zahn’s left arm was metal.

“Fuck…” Winnow’s unfocused eyes blinked rapidly before processing the gleam of steel. “Now, that’s not fair…”

“I’m sorry,” Zahn whispered before he realized the words were on his tongue. “Winnow han-Madrom, I’m so sorry.”

As Winnow struggled for breath, raindrops fell softly onto the front of her shirt. Except that there was no rain in Sazuma. Zahn was crying.

“I won’t…” I won’t hurt your friends, he wanted to say, so she wouldn’t die worrying for them, but the words caught in his throat choking him. He couldn’t even do this small thing for her. You worthless cur, Zahn, how did you mess this up so badly?

Zahn had intended a decisive kill with that first stab, so she would go down without ever looking him in the eye or feeling any pain. But no. He had missed the abdominal aorta by an inch and now he got to watch her die slowly, close enough to feel her breath and count her freckles as they dulled to gray beneath flecks of blood.

“It’s…” Winnow forced the words out, “j-just me… isn’t it? I’m… the only target.”

Still unable to speak, Zahn nodded.

“Ah…” The touch on Zahn’s metal arm changed. Winnow was no longer digging her nails in, trying to drain him. Instead, she caressed the metal with her first two fingers, as if to give comfort—though his arm couldn’t absorb comfort any more than it could be sapped. Winnow’s dark, damnedly-expressive Sazuman eyes had gone soft.

“It’s alright,” she said with her hard-won breath. “I knew this was going to happen sometime.” Drawn muscles in her face relaxed, her eyes glazing as she slipped into the place where pain no longer registered. “You did your job, love… Don’t cry.”

And that was too much for Zahn.

Heedless of the risks, he yanked his metal arm from Winnow’s grasp and punched her in the throat. Sharpened knuckles went through her windpipe and broke her spine, killing her instantly. Zahn often wished for more sensation in his metal arm. This was the first time he found himself wishing for less, wishing the crunch weren’t quite so palpable.

Don’t cry?

He shook as he straightened up over the bloody ruin that had been a woman. The other two miners were still down, Korrik out cold, Nelen groaning feebly, but their earlier shouts had drawn attention. Lights winked to life in the windows down the street and footsteps pounded up the pavebark toward the alley.

Thank God. Had it not been for the pure practical need, Zahn wasn’t sure he would have been able to move. Snatching his dagger from Winnow’s fingers, he scaled the alley wall, trying not to see the blood his hands left on the roots. A pause to recover his cloak and he was gone before the footsteps turned the corner.

“Someone’s been murdered!” a voice exclaimed from the alley at his back and he moved faster, trying not to hear. But the wind had slowed and the voices cut the night with terrible clarity.

“Goddess, it’s Winnow!”

He wasn’t fast enough to escape the sounds of Winnow’s family as they reached the scene—her sisters, her nieces, her little nephew who thought the world of her. He heard them screaming.

For seven days, he had stalked Winnow, watching her every move for something. It wasn’t until now, staggering in the dark, that Zahn realized that he hadn’t really been waiting to get her alone. He had been waiting for understanding, the telling moment when her behavior turned nefarious and he saw clearly why she had to die.

Some misstep would uncover that she was secretly trafficking slaves, dealing in forbidden magic, plotting against the government, pocketing diamonds on the side, something. But that moment had never come. Winnow had been a normal aunt and sister the whole time he watched her. She had been a normal aunt and sister when he put his fist through her neck.

To the last, she had been a good Sazuman woman, strong, loyal, and kind—even to her killer.

Don’t cry.

Fuck Sazuma, even in the pits of Krell, Zahn had never killed someone who begged him not to cry. At the very least, in that hell, Zahn had had a thin justification for the blood on his hands: he had killed those other slaves so that they wouldn’t kill him. It had been a threadbare veil between his soul and damning guilt, but at least it had been something. This—murder without any discernible reason—felt like downing poison without the antidote.

The ‘why’ is mine to worry about,” the boss had said, “and what do you worry about, Zahnaz?”

“The job, Rama.”

“Can you do that?”

“Yes, Rama,” and Zahn had meant it. At least, he had wanted to. He wanted to be an asset, for once in his life, instead of a liability.

“That’s why I’m here,” she had said, ever stable as the deepest roots, “so you and the rest of Sazuma never have to deal with ‘why.’”

Zahn hated himself for not being able to find comfort in those words. Something in him was broken. Something that persistently cried ‘Winnow!’ with the voice of a grieving child.

He didn’t know how far he ran before he finally stopped to lean against a fence, certain he was about to empty the contents of his stomach. He gripped the latticed roots with his right hand. It wasn’t as strong or stabilizing as his left, but he needed the feeling of the bark beneath his human fingers to make him real as he closed his eyes and shoved down his nausea.

There was blood between his fingers.

Had his mind been working properly, he would have paused earlier to clean his hands and daggers before leaving a trail of red fingerprints halfway across the district. Not like it mattered. The scene was supposed to be gruesome and ultimately attributable to one of the Rama’s climbing assassins. No authorities would search out poor Winnow’s killers because Zahn and his guild were the authorities. Winnow’s community would have to accept that their sister had been killed to preserve peace in Sazuma and accept that there was nothing they could do about it, like Zahn had. At least, he was trying to.

The sound of running water ahead reoriented Zahn on his mental map of the city, placing him just east of the local stream leading off the Sazumriver. He stumbled to it, telling himself he was being professional. He was cleaning up evidence. Really, he was hoping that the water would drown out the sobs of ‘Winnow! Winnow!’ that had chased him all this way through the night.

In any other city, rivers became dirty as populations swelled. Not in Sazuma. The sheer volume of fresh spring-water that poured from the center of the Tree down from one tier of the city to the next washed filth away before it ever got the chance to accumulate. Tactomages continuously adjusted root-woven dams to redirect water according to the needs of the inner city, the surrounding fields, and the tree’s farthest-reaching roots. Nowhere else on the continent were waters this clear.

Even this little stream in a teeming slum was restored to crystalline perfection in the night. Falling to his knees by the channel, Zahn plunged both hands into the water said to cure all ills. This claim, Zahn had learned, was what the Krellish would call an ‘oversell.’ Sazuma’s waters protected against disease, but they couldn’t close an open wound, give a man back his arm, or wash a rotten soul.

Zahn scrubbed and scrubbed until he realized that he was bruising his right hand on his left. The abrasion of metal against flesh felt insufficient to get either completely clean, but Zahn did reluctantly pull both hands out—his left numb as always, his right throbbing and raw from the abuse. Fingers still dripping, he detached the sheathed dagger from his right hip and cleaned it.

It took a measure of self-control not to simply let go of the dagger as he held it beneath the running water. What a relief it would have been to see the current swallow the weapon that killed Winnow and whisk it away forever. But daggers like Zahn’s—as good for killing as they were for climbing —were expensive, and they weren’t really his. They belonged to the Guild, as Zahn did. The only difference was that they functioned the way they were supposed to.

Perhaps, Zahn thought ruefully, it would be best for everyone if he simply left his good daggers here for the Spy Guild to recover and threw himself into the water. The rational part of his brain—the part that had kept him alive through poverty, slavery, and mutilation, to the age of twenty-four—should have shut the thought down before it started. But his gaze had turned downstream, suddenly wistful. Two blocks from here, this stream reconnected with the Sazumriver. Thunder of the Wilds. If anything could wash a man clean…

“God help me, are you done sulking yet?” the voice made Zahn jump.

Somewhere in the cool rush of water, his heartrate had gone down, but it came pounding back with a vengeance as he whirled to scan the rooftops. It had been a long time since he had heard that accent, that voice—the silk and rasping slither of steel on a whetstone.

“Do you fall on your knees in the open and cry after every job?”

“Nath…” Zahn wanted to relax when he recognized the man silhouetted on the nearest rooftop. Something kept his muscles drawn in apprehension.

“You know, when I first caught up to you, I was thinking of all these hilarious one-liners about you sniveling like a girl.”

“Of course, you were.”

“Then you just kept going, and going, and going, and the jokes went stale in my head—”

“Alright—”

“And you were still crying, so I nodded off for a bit—”

“Nath—”

“And when I came to, you were still—”

“I get it!” Zahn snapped, slamming his dagger back into its sheath with unnecessary force. “My condolences on the loss of your one-liners. Did you come all the way to this garbage part of town just to mock me?”

“Nay, love. Not just for that.” Nath spoke Zahn’s native Daraxean fluently, but with a thick mountain accent. The effect was a confusing emotional soup, at once reminiscent of Zahn’s childhood and chillingly foreign. “I’m hunting.”

“Hunting…?” Zahn stuck on whether to ask ‘what’ or ‘who’?

Before he could decide, Nath dropped, catlike, from the rooftop with silence that belied his muscular frame. As he stalked forward on those soundless feet, lantern light fell on godmarks like Zahn’s but thinner, a pair of silver lines dropping from the metalmancer’s hairline, over each sharp cheekbone to the even sharper line of his jaw. In the daylight, they were an unassuming gray; here in the night, they caught the moonlight like tears.

Nath looked rougher than the last time Zahn had seen him, his cloak worn ratty from travel in the Wilds and God only knew what other places he’d been plying his evil trade. He’d picked up a truly stupid hat—broad-brimmed and leather like those worn by Krellish cattle wranglers—which rested on his back over the guard of his massive sword. If the intent was to distract from the oversized blade, it was working. At least, it would have been had Zahn not seen that sword in action.

“I thought you left Sazuma after the Water Gardens.”

“I did.” Nath rolled his shoulders. “Nice thing about being a free agent is that you can come and go… and come again if there’s aught worth comin’ back for.”

“So, what brought you back this time?”

“Funny. That’s actually what I wanted to discuss with you, my little Daraxean.”

“What?” Zahn said warily. “I didn’t steal your mark or anything?” If the Spy Guild wanted Winnow dead, then it was possible someone else did too… someone willing to hire a less savory agent than Zahn.

“Steal my mark, kiddo? No.” Nath chuckled. “Not exactly.” He was mere feet from Zahn now, his face fully illuminated, cut stone in the moonlight, like the mountains around Daraxes. Like home.

Zahn should have pulled away when the mercenary reached up and brushed a strand of hair behind his ear. But he was too spent, too weak, and old magnetism tipped him forward into the touch.

“Nath…” That calloused sword hand trailed down his cheek and Zahn let himself take a fraction of comfort he didn’t deserve in the feel of northern skin on his. “I can’t do this right now.” Still, he failed to pull away. “I have to report back t—Ah!” he cried out as pain lanced through his right shoulder.

In a split second, he had shoved Nath away, but whatever the weapon was—a knife? A dart?—it had already pierced deep. Reaching to his shoulder, Zahn grasped for a hilt, only to find his metal fingers crushing down on something with too much give. A tingle seared through his shoulder and spread like water seeping into fabric.

Tearing the thing from his shoulder, Zahn realized that it wasn’t a weapon at all. It was a bulb syringe. The kind wildermages used to inject medicines into the bloodstream. The moment Zahn’s clumsy metal fingers had closed on the lemur’s bladder bulb, he had injected himself.

“Alright…” Nath had retreated a calculated five paces and was now eyeing Zahn with the cautious intensity of a predator—the lion watching the buffalo stumble, hungry but still wary of the horns. “You made that easier than I could have hoped. You should really learn to control that arm better.”

“What the fuck, Nath?” Zahn spat as the tingle spread and blurred his vision. “What was in that?”

“Poison. Obviously.”

“Why?”

“I told you I was hunting.”

“You…” Zahn swayed, stumbled, and fought to clear his head.

“Easy, kiddo.” Nath held up a hand. “I wouldn’t try to fight if I were you. That syringe was packed with three times the recommended dosage. Sorry, but I know what your constitution’s like. Didn’t wanna take no chances.”

Right. Nath had seen Zahn down enough drinks to drown a man and not even start to slur, but Nath didn’t know that it was more than just a strong constitution. Zahn had a special mechanism for dealing with the substances in his body. He just needed to buy a minute to put it into practice.

“You can’t do this,” he forced out. “I’m part of the Spy Guild.”

“Oh, Zahn,” Nath said pityingly, “I dunno which assumption is dumber. That I only take Guild-approved jobs or that the members of your little spy club ne’er put out hits on each other.”

“They wouldn’t…”

“God Ascended, Zahn Lissdesa Tamdesa, you can’t still be this naïve,” Nath said, seemingly unbothered by the banter. He was waiting too—whether for Zahn to pass out or foam at the mouth and die, Zahn didn’t know. But he was going to be disappointed.

Zahn was almost there. Breathing deeply, he had gathered the poison to his chest. Now, he just needed to keep Nath talking long enough to close the invading substance into the vault. Well, he called it a vault for lack of a better word. He didn’t know what it was, just that he could use it to store substances and keep them out of his bloodstream. It worked on alcohol, drugs, and the tactomantically-transferred strength the Sazumans were fond of swapping.

“Look, I’m not stupid,” he said, even as his brain swam and crawled in a very stupid manner. “If the Guild wanted me dead, they’d never hire a loose-lipped mercenary. It’d be easier to do from the inside. Who really hired you?”

“You don’t wanna know.” Nath’s tone had grown distracted, his brow furrowed. “And excuse me, but whyare you not passing out?”

Having gathered the tingling poison into the vault, Zahn crammed it back and slammed the door. As the bolt banged home, Zahn’s eyes snapped wide open. He straightened, flesh and steel fingers flexing as he reoriented to the physical world.

Nath took a step back, disconcerted. “You gotta be fucking kidding me… The wildermages told me that dose would take out an ox! Zahn of Daraxes… what are you?”

Zahn drew his right dagger. “Come and find out.”

It was empty bravado. A climbing dagger was not the weapon to bring to a fight with Nath of the Iron Valley. And, while Zahn was a decent fighter, his time in the pits of Krell had given him a brutally realistic gauge of his skill level. Had this been a match in that arena, Zahn would have bet a house on Nath.

“Now, Zahn…” The mercenary’s expression shifted from disbelief into a jagged smile that made Zahn feel woefully defenseless. The pit-honed part of Zahn’s mind that zeroed in on threats had fixed on the sword slung across Nath’s back. It looked deceptively normal—if oversized—in its leather sheath, but Zahn knew better. “You don’t want to do this.”

“But you do.” Zahn stumbled into violence and did his best to endure it; Nath thrived on it. “So, what choice do I have?”

Zahn was spring loaded into his stance, ready to explode forward at the first twitch of Nath’s fingers. It was five paces between them, an easy enough distance to close. But could Zahn close it before the mercenary reached his sword? That was the deciding question. Because, if Nath drew that sword, the fight was over.

“You could always stand down,” Nath suggested.

“And what? Let you drag me to your lair and cut me into little pieces?”

Nath shrugged. “For old times’ sake?”

Zahn’s voice went frigid. “A little late to play that card, don’t you think?”

“Worth a shot.”

“Well, I’m really not in the mood, Nath. If you’re going to cut me, you get to do it with steel in your teeth.”

The wind had dropped off, leaving a palpable stillness between the two men, the world holding her breath on the next move.

Nath’s grin turned feral. “That’s the spirit!” he said and went for his sword.

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Sazuma is a serialized story that I publish once every even month to my $3 patrons on Patreon (with my other serial, Gunpowder Magnolia, falling…

Continue reading → SAZUMA (Patreon Serial) Sample Chapter

Blood Over Bright Haven Banner

New Novella Incoming!

UPDATE: As of the most recent draft, Blood Over Bright Haven is no longer a novella. At 80,000 words, it is now decidedly a novel. Someone has also been kind enough to make a page on Goodreads, so you can add it to your tbr! (1/3/22)

If you follow this blog or my newsletter, you’ve probably seen me vaguely reference “background projects” other than my ongoing serials. Some of those are short stories I’ve been working for various anthologies. One is the subject of this announcement.

I’ve known for a couple months that I wanted to put this book on the front burner but I wanted to wait until I’d finished a first draft, settled on a title, and created cover art to announce it publicly. At the end of March, I finished a rough draft and, last week, I finalized a cover design, so today, I’m excited to announce…

Blood Over Bright Haven follows a research mage who uncovers a secret that could change the course of magic forever—if it doesn’t get her killed first.

Genre:
I’m tentatively calling this novella “dark academia” although, as with most of my books, I’m not sure how well it fits any one genre. Unlike my other projects (Theonite, Altima, or otherwise) this one will be low on action and high on brooding intrigue.

Setting:
Blood Over Bright Haven takes place in the Altima universe, but in a vastly different era and geographical location from Seven Forsaken, Gunpowder Magnolia, and Sazuma (which all occur within the same couple decades). Unlike those sprawling flintlock epics, this novella focuses on one seemingly utopian metropolis built on a high level of magical technology. It is a standalone, meaning you need absolutely no knowledge of my other works to follow the plot.

Intended Audience:
I’m classing this as an adult fantasy–more due to its dark themes than any explicit language or sexual content.

Release Date:
I’m hoping for a late 2021 release, but I’m not locking in a date until I have the second draft finished. If I end up wanting to do serious work on parts of it, we’ll probably end up with a 2022 release.

ARCs:
Advanced reader copies obviously won’t be going out for a while, but if you want to be notified when they become available, just let me know at ml@mlwangbooks.com.

As I mentioned above, Bright Haven is going to be low on the dramatic superpowers and lovingly choreographed action scenes that permeate my other work. For that reason, I’m not trying to push it hard with fans of Theonite, The Sword of Kaigen, or my newer fantasy serials like Seven Forsaken. I’m just going to put it out there in a chill way on a small budget and hope it finds readers who enjoy it.

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UPDATE: As of the most recent draft, Blood Over Bright Haven is no longer a novella. At 80,000 words, it is now decidedly a novel.…

Continue reading → New Novella Incoming!