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    God Stones: Books 1 - 3


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      The God Stones Series

      Books 1 to 3

      Otto Schafer

      Sound Eye Press

      Copyright © 2021 by Otto Schafer

      All rights reserved.

      No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

      All characters and events in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

      The Secret Journal published in 2019

      The Keepers of the Light published in 2020

      The Days of Myth published in 2021

      Cover designs by Damonza

      The Days of Myth map design by Fantasy Map Ink

      Editing by The Blue Garret

      Sound Eye Press

      www.ottoschafer.com

      Contents

      The Secret Journal

      Prologue

      1. Run

      2. Discoveries Ruined

      3. The King’s Throne

      4. Old Friend, New Plan

      5. Subdue the Enemy

      6. One Hundred Seventy-Eight Ghosts

      7. The Book

      8. Money Pit

      9. Pete

      10. Clearing Stones

      11. The Date

      12. The Cross

      13. Lincoln’s Secret

      14. Hardheaded

      15. Pete’s Office

      16. The Find

      17. Eavesdropper

      18. The Find

      19. The Plan

      20. Chardonnay, Scotch, and Nightmares

      21. Keeper

      22. You Must Search, Doctor

      23. Wrong Number

      24. Fourteen Seconds to Adventure

      25. Dagrun

      26. Down and Up

      27. The Culvert

      28. Tentacles

      29. Abraham’s Secret

      30. This Must Be What It Feels Like to Die

      31. Prime Focus

      32. The Birthplace of Fire

      33. That’s Going to Leave a Mark

      34. The Corner of Her Eye

      35. Do You Accept?

      36. The Flood

      37. Focus

      38. Trust and Protect

      39. Feathers

      40. Petersburg

      41. Answers

      42. The Past

      Epilogue: Jack

      Acknowledgments

      The Keepers of the Light

      1. Destroy the Instructions

      2. Perfect Circle

      3. Fracturing

      4. Settling Old Scores

      5. When the Time Is Right

      6. Overlooked

      7. Home

      8. Meet the Neighbors

      9. Giants

      10. The Samurai

      11. Sentheye

      12. The Grooves Are the Key

      13. In the Distance

      14. Just Cut Off Its Head

      15. Brushwork and Magic?

      16. A Hard Rain

      17. Rise

      18. A Bad Idea

      19. Not Alone

      20. Lincoln’s Gauntlet

      21. Red Rubies

      22. Below the Pyramid

      23. Rusty Bite

      24. Temples and Tombs

      25. Lever

      26. Stoneclad and Thunderbird

      27. The Real Apep

      28. The Underneath

      29. Judas

      30. Farewell, Brother!

      31. Bound by Blood

      32. Sounds in the Dark

      33. Love Inferno

      34. Don’t Look Back

      35. Click

      36. End Game

      37. ¡Eres el Amor de Mi Vida!

      38. Not Today

      39. Move

      40. I Won’t Let You Down

      41. Into the River

      42. Breathe

      43. Serpent

      44. Pressing On

      45. Reborn of Dragon Fire and Blood

      46. The Giant King

      47. I Thought This Was the End

      48. A Friend and Ally

      49. Cooperate or Die!

      50. Guests

      51. Feast and Grow!

      52. Old Guilt

      53. Farewell, Prince

      54. Forgive

      55. Family Reunion

      56. Band of Holes

      57. Follow Your Heart

      Epilogue: Jack

      Glossary

      Acknowledgments

      The Days of Myth

      I. THE EXPEDITION

      1. Setting Off

      2. I Will Show Them Something Truly Special

      3. Not a Spoke Card

      4. In the Beginning

      5. Rats in a Maze

      6. Her Grandmother’s Eyes

      7. Shrub Woman

      8. Mind Speak

      9. The Burning World

      10. Yaya’s Quest

      11. Meatloaf Special

      12. You Did What You Had To

      13. Governess

      14. Fleeting Laughter

      15. Catfish and Honey Buns

      16. God Stone Storm

      17. Sitting Ducks

      18. A Breakfast Vision

      19. Here We Go, Danny!

      20. The Devil Has Come to Chiapas

      21. Your Mom Says Hi

      22. Jurupa

      23. Better Off Without You

      II. ARMIES OF THE WORLD

      24. We Are Nephilbock

      25. It’s Just a Ride

      26. One Hundred Years

      27. The Wicker Basket

      28. Let Them See

      29. Bulldozing for Answers

      30. The Eyra of Tunga

      31. Cerberus

      32. The White Forest of Gold

      33. Cloners Are Shifters

      34. Return of the King

      35. Reunited

      36. The Devil’s Garden

      37. Pando the Trembling Giant

      38. Leadership 101

      39. Call Your God

      40. Nightshade the Taker

      41. Angel’s Surprise

      42. The Dragons Fight with Us

      43. Condemned to Death

      44. The Place in Between

      45. A Prince Among Them

      46. Clash of the Titans

      47. A Shared Memory

      Epilogue: Jack

      Glossary

      Acknowledgments

      Sign Up to Read More

      About the Author

      For my mom.

      I wish you could have read this –

      I think you would have enjoyed it.

      Prologue

      1050 ad

      Egypt, deep under the sand

      Light entering through a small fracture in the wall cast a single beam upon the stone slab where his head had rested through time. Tiny particles moved densely within the beam, swirling through it, weightless as if the laws of gravity held no command inside the shaft of light.

      Apep gasped, coughed violently, and then gagged on the heavy air thick with dust. The blanket of sediment put into motion by the sudden lurching of his shaky hands trembled around him. Yanked from a violent nightmare, he blinked in confusion, squinting hard to see through the surrounding cloud of dirt. He tried wiggling his toes. He could feel them, and they seemed to respond, a good indication that he was alive and functioning. How long have I slept? he wondered, realizing it must have been a long time… too long, in fact, but there was no way he could have known that he had slept through millennia.

      How did I get here?

      He carefully rolled himself onto his side and pulled himself into a sitting position. The stone slab felt cold and hard against his bare blue-grey
    skin. He surveyed the small chamber as he stretched his neck from one side to the other. Could this light be the catalyst that woke me?

      Slowly, memories began to spark in his mind like the brief flashes of two flint stones striking in the dark. He was imprisoned on this world, cast into this eternal sleep by the six sages at the order of the pharaoh. How much time had been snatched away as he slept? Oh… their audacity! “Humans,” he croaked, tasting the word on his dust-covered tongue. They called themselves sages! Sages only by a power he brought to this world. Sages only by the power of the Sentheye. They dared use it against him!

      The memories came in a prodigious flood; anger exploded inside him like a sick virus, wrong and unholy, deep in his chest. The feeling materialized into something physical, twisting his guts and blinding his mind. Oh, how he had been wronged. Bile surged up his throat, stinging the back of his tongue as he fought the urge to vomit.

      He eased himself off the slab and collapsed to his knees, his legs unable to hold his weight. He turned his wrath inward, allowing it to pool and consume every drop of his being. Using his hate as fuel, he willed his legs upward until he stood, legs quavering. This would never happen again. Never would he allow himself to be brought to his knees again.

      Apep rolled his bony fingers inwards, clenching them into tight fists. My own father. My own flesh and blood stealing the crown from underneath me. Robbing me of my future. And why? Why? To give it to my undeserving brother. His stomach lurched. Syldan, my own brother, if only I’d been successful when I tried to kill you in your sleep.

      But he had not been successful in killing his brother, and his failure had cost him greatly. Not only had he been publicly denounced from his family, but the attempt on his brother’s life had cost him banishment from the kingdom. So they thought!

      His plan had been brilliant… simple. Come to this world, create an army, return to Karelia, and overthrow his father. Take back what is his! But it had gone so terribly wrong. Humans! Humans had ruined his plans. He spat thick into the sand at his feet. This was of no matter now. These were simple mistakes of a time long past. He was awake, and no amount of time had softened his hunger for his birthright, his hate for his family, or his desire for revenge. This world once made the perfect place to build an army outside the watchful eye of his father, and it would do so again.

      No matter how long it takes, I will find a way. As sure as the silt-laden air I breathe, the day will come when all inhabitants of Karelia will fall to their knees and worship me not only as their king, but as their god!

      Despite the protesting cracks and pops of dormant cartilage and bone, Apep stretched his arms wide and smiled. This is what it must be like when a sleeping god wakes. To be resurrected. He felt close to the gods now, knowing they must share his vision. The gods must have wanted for him what he wanted for himself. In time, he would reap their reward and take his place among them, but first he had worlds to conquer. He looked again to the single ray of light. The gods had pulled him from darkness and set loose a creature of fury. A being of anger. The time had come for all to bow down before him and pay the debt owed.

      Apep stepped forward. His legs trembled, but his words spilled forth, ringing with his absolute conviction. “I am the wrath of the gods. If my enemies had not committed great sins against me, the gods would not have set a wrath like me upon them!”

      Apep strode toward the shaft of light. Muffled voices beyond the fractured wall penetrated the sandstone. The voices became louder as their excitement peaked. Stone chipped as the sound of swinging picks bit deeper into the wall with each swing. Scraping stone, shovels sliding through sand, the last stone fell away, and a broader shaft of light poured into the room.

      Apep smiled. It was time to begin.

      1

      Run

      Present day

      Petersburg, Illinois

      Garrett begged time to just please let the sun hold fast to the sky a little while longer, but he knew it was a wasted wish. Time seemed the enemy of every boy, wicked in its dammed doggedness to just tick steadily away. Unwilling, time, to ever speed up when you needed it to, when you wanted the bell to ring, chores to be over, or your father’s grueling bug-out training to just end. Time was cruel the other way too. Begrudging to share more, to give extra, to break the steadfast tick tock and cut a kid a break. No, time never seemed a friend to a boy.

      His only hope now was to beat time, and so he ran as fast as he could. Images of blurred trees raced by as he recklessly descended a narrow trail. Roots and small boulders jutted out of the soil, threatening to grasp ahold of his foot and slam him to the ground. Unconsciously, he let his feet fall in rapid succession as he bombed down the hill. Risk was no matter now, as no risk outweighed the doom that awaited him if he couldn’t somehow beat back time.

      It was still only March, but Garrett’s odd-job work-history references had earned him a spot on the early cleanup crew at New Salem State Park. If he performed well, he would easily have a job on the park-maintenance crew for the entire summer. That would be sweet since the alternative was detasseling corn and walking beans. Both were hot, itchy work and so, so boring; walking back and forth across fields all day, pulling tassels off corn stalks or pulling weeds out of beans – no thanks. Not if he could help it. He had been there, done that, and in fact had become the crew leader the last two years in a row while working for the detasseling outfit out of Springfield. That experience helped him land this job, and for that, he was grateful.

      New Salem was famously known as the place where Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth president of the United States of America, spent his early adulthood. The park sat nestled into the bluffs along the Sangamon River Valley right in the middle of central nowhere Illinois. Stepping into the village was like stepping back to a time one hundred and fifty years earlier. The village was full of beautiful cabins complete with all the furnishings of the era, a rail-splitter, and a fully equipped blacksmith’s shop. During the summer months, actors were hired to play the roles of the 1830s villagers. Even old Abe himself could be found wandering the park – well, an actor playing him, anyway.

      After an easy day of clearing an area of cigarette butts with a trash poker and hosing out the park garbage cans, Garrett had hastily stripped off his work clothes along with his steel-toed boots and stuffed them into his backpack, stashing it behind a small pile of brush near the trailhead. He had time then. He had the moments and the sun, and it was all fine.

      Now, on the balls of his feet with arms pumping an urgent cadence, he wore a pair of school-issued cross-country shorts and an old tee shirt he had torn to be sleeveless. Even though his worn sneakers were in desperate need of replacement, as evidenced by the occasional rock biting sharply through his thinning soles, somehow they still managed to keep his toes contained.

      Garrett had just wanted to go for a trail run after work. On the face it seemed a simple thing. He loved to run, but what boy didn’t love to run? After all, he was on the cross-country team at Porta High. On the surface that was good and well for everyone who saw. But he knew his love for the run went deeper. Sure, track running, street running, and even that little trail behind the school was all okay, but trails – true trails – were what he wanted, what he needed, and New Salem had them. Besides, when was he closer to the trails than after work? Never. New Salem was near three miles from home. He was never closer, and so he thought, plenty of time for a loop through the upper section even going easy, two if I fly.

      He questioned it now, as he ran, panicked. What have I done? But the trails had pulled at him, hadn’t they? Calling to him to come run, never mind the setting sun, they beckoned… You have time. Never mind the rules, you have a watch… plenty of time. No, it wasn’t his fault. He’d had plenty of time to beat the streetlights. But he knew it was a lie. Time or no, the watch had held fast to his wrist, still did now, ticking off the seconds until the streetlights would come on. Yet never once had he spared it a glance. Not once did he weigh the sun in the sky as it sank d
    angerously close to dusk. He knew a truth. Time hides from him on the trail and he loses it… loses himself. And everything else? Everything else falls away. It was his fault. It was all his fault. Why? he pled with himself. How? Dammed fool! You’re itching to be whipped!

     


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