Shift of the Tide by Jeffe Kennedy Spotlight
Latest in the magical world of the Twelve Kingdoms #buynow @jeffekennedy
The Shift of the Tide
(Uncharted Realms #3)
AUTHOR: Jeffe Kennedy
A QUICKSILVER HEART
Released from the grip of a
tyrant, the Twelve Kingdoms have thrown all that touch them into chaos. As the
borders open, new enemies emerge to vie for their hard-won powerāand old
deceptions crumble under the strainā¦
The most talented shapeshifter of her generation, Zynda has one love in her life: freedom. The open air above her, the water before her, the sun on her skin or wings or furātheir sensual glories more than make up for her loneliness. She serves the High Queenās company well, but she canāt trust her allies with her secrets, or the secrets of her people. Best that she should keep her distance, alone.
Except
wherever she escapes, Marskal, the Queenās quiet lieutenant, seems to find her.
Solid, stubborn, and disciplined, heās no more fluid than rock. Yet he knows
what she likes, what thrills and unnerves her, when sheās hiding something. His
lithe warriorās body promises pleasure she has gone too long without. But no
matter how careful, how tender, how incendiary he is, only Zynda can know the
sacrifice she must make for her peopleās futureāand the time is drawing nearā¦
Buy links:
Release date: August 29, 2017
The Shift
of the Tide
Excerpt
Water streamed over my skin in a
rush, enveloping and responsive at once, like music following my dance.
Around me, the
shapes of coral resonated with depth, shading moving beyond the visual and into
other spectrums. That was one reason I loved this form, where my echolocation
gave sound nuance like a rainbow of color. The crystal waters teemed with sea
life of all varieties, most of them quite tasty looking, making my stomach
tingle with animal anticipation.
I exercised enough
conscious control, however, to refrain from sampling the living buffet. Unless
pressed into it in order to surviveāwhich had happened more often since I
undertook this quest than ever before in my lifeāI didnāt eat as an animal. It
was one of those rules taught to Tala children early, one of the tricks and
habits to forestall the worst disaster imaginable for a shapeshifter: being trapped
forever in a non-human form.
With the great
exception of Final Form. Iād accepted taking that as my destiny, as the only
way to save my people. I would do it for my sisterās dead babies, and for the
ones I would never have. Iād be lonely, perhaps, but my family was dying off
one by one regardless. My mother was gone along with all my siblings, but two.
And if Anya kept trying to have babies, sheād soon go with them. I would live
my life alone, either way, and nothing would change that.
One day, quite soon,
I would become a dragon, and stay that way forever.
Though that day
drew ever closerāif I succeeded in getting the invitation I soughtāfor the
moment I savored one of my favorites of my many forms, swimming hard and
working out the restlessness that plagued me. If I got a choice of what form to
be stuck in forever, Iād pick the dolphin. Its large, mammalian brain contained
plenty of room to retain a good portion of reasoning and higher thought. Fast,
agile, being a dolphin was simply fun. Iād learned it early and returned to it
often.
Learning a new
form is part instinct, part observation and study, and part gift from beyond.
Some say those are the gifts of the three goddessesāknowledge of the heart from
the goddess of love, dawn, and twilight, Glorianna; disciplined study from the
warrior goddess of high noon, Danu; and the mysterious arcane touch of Moranu.
Most Tala look to
Moranu first, and thatās largely why, because we are shapeshiftersāand each
shift is a leap of faith in the goddess of the moon, night and shadows. But I
needed more than Moranuās guidance to take Final Form. I needed a real dragon
to teach me.
Our ancestors had
found a way to shift into it, becoming the great, virtually immortal dragons of
old. In that form they retained full consciousnessāsome said greater
intelligence than human mindsāalong with all the magical gifts the shapeshifter
had possessed. Most important, being a dragon came with the additional and
priceless gift of modulating magic, something we needed desperately if the Tala,
the magical and shapeshifting last remnants of the great races were to survive
beyond another generation. Weād preserved so muchāand yet not enough. So much
knowledge the ancients had taken with them, that we failed to understand.
How it would feel
to be the dragonā¦ well, no one had been able to take Final Form in generations.
So, no one could tell me if taking that irreversible final step felt like being
trapped in an unyielding cage. Even if it would, much as the prospect revolted
me, I would do it. And, once there, I would be unable to turn back. But the
reward would be worth it. I firmly believed that.
Taking Final Form
was both the pinnacle of accomplishment for a shapeshifter and the ultimate
sacrifice, but weād lost the intangible path when the dragons disappeared from
the world.
Now that my friend
and scholar Dafne, now Queen Nakoa KauPo of Nahanau, had awakened the dragon
Kiraka from hibernation beneath the volcano, I hoped to be the first Tala to
take Final Form. But that required an invitation from the great dragon, and so
far sheād only spoken to Dafne. I tried to be patientāafter all Iād waited my
entire life for this moment, and generations of Tala had lived and died without
ever reaching itābut the sense of time slipping away rushed around me like the
crystal warm waters.
A pod of actual
dolphins sounded in the distance, their convivial feeding luring me to join
them, to enjoy for a while longer the joy of freedom from responsibility. I
swam in their direction. Paused when the alarm call went up.
Shark.
And they had
calves in the family group. No question that they should be protected at all
costs. Babies are the future. Without them we die the final death.
I shot past the
group encircling the calves, joining those who attacked the shark. Finding my
opening, I angled exactly and rammed its gills with my beak, exulting in the
crunch of soft cartilage. It should have flinchedāfrom my blow and from the
other dolphins, attacking the gills on the other side, and its soft bellyābut
it swam on. Almost mindlessly.
I had a bad taste
in my mouth, both literally and metaphorically. Like magic gone rotten.
A limitation of
the dolphin form, however, is that I canāt use my magical senses in it.
Otherwise I would have probed for the source of the distasteful essence. As it
was, the pod easily herded the shark away. It floundered in the water, slowing
and sinking. It would be no threat to them or the precious calves.
The group sang to
me, promising fish and fun. Very tempting to join them.
But Iād made
promises, and I intended to keep them.
With a mental
sigh, I headed back to shore. That had
been enough of an exercise break to clear my mind and restore my sense of self.
Mossbacks didnāt seem to understand how shifting into animal form could be a
kind of recentering, as it looked to them like the exact opposite of thatāgoing
farther away from self, not more firmly into the centerābut mutability anchors
me in a way I canāt easily explain. Or would, even if I found the words. The
Tala have a reputation for keeping secrets, and itās well earned.
Itās also a dodgy
undertaking, full of fine lines and careful obfuscation. Especially as we have
no hard and fast rulesāthe Tala rarely doābeyond making sure no one ever again
has the power to destroy what weāve so carefully preserved.
Though that too
lay in our future. I donāt have strong foresight, but the visions plagued even
me. Oily shadows penetrating to soil the white cliffs of my home in Annfwn.
Blood in the water. My cousin, the High Queen of the Thirteen Kingdoms thought
the Temple of Deyrr, with their
unholy black magic and corrupt rituals to enslave the living dead was all her
problem. But that ancient and lethal arrow pointed ultimately at the Heart of
Annfwn. The beginning of this conflict, and the prophesied site of the end of
it.
Not for me,
however. My task had been set before the priestess of Deyrr showed up at the court of Ordnung, corrupting the former high
king. Others would take up that battle. Though Iād helped my companions, doing
my best to make sure the powerful jewel, the Star of Annfwn stayed out of the
High Priestess of Deyrrās fetid
hands, ultimately protecting the thirteenāand the other realms inside the
protective magical barrierāwould fall to them. My allegiance belonged to the
Tala and my personal mission, first and foremost. It would do us no good to
turn back Deyrr, only for the Tala to
wither and die.
As the dragon, at
least, Iād be well situated to fight to defend my homeland of Annfwn.
Had that been the
oddly familiar flavor of the shark? It didnāt seem likely. Not here in the
waters of Nahanau, a fair distance from the barrier. Iād never encountered Deyrrās living dead at Ordnungātheyād
all been burnt by the time I arrivedābut I had tasted the High Priestessās
magic when she attacked Ursula. They could be the same. Though why it would be
in a mindless shark, I didnāt know.
Troubling.
Once in the
shallows, I shifted back to human form, swimming with a relaxed breast stroke
until my feet found the bottom. While the Nahanauns had become more accustomed
to my presence around the palace, they werenāt accustomed to shapeshifting.
After a few early displays to impress them with my abilitiesāat my companionsā
behest, mostly to demonstrate that we werenāt captives to be underestimatedāI
preferred to shift discreetly. I rarely cared to make a show of it, regardless.
Itās a private thing. Intimate.
Jeffe Kennedy is an award-winning
author whose works include novels, non-fiction, poetry, and short fiction. She
has been a Ucross Foundation Fellow, received the Wyoming Arts Council
Fellowship for Poetry, and was awarded a Frank Nelson Doubleday Memorial Award.
Her award-winning fantasy romance
trilogy The
Twelve Kingdoms
hit the shelves starting in May 2014. Book 1, The
Mark of the Tala,
received a starred Library Journal review and was nominated for the RT Book of
the Year
while the sequel, The Tears of the Rose received a Top Pick Gold and was
nominated for the RT
Reviewersā Choice Best Fantasy Romance of 2014. The third book, The Talon of the Hawk, won the RT
Reviewersā Choice Best Fantasy Romance of 2015. Two more books followed in this
world, beginning the spin-off series The Uncharted Realms. Book one in that series, The
Pages of the Mind,
has also been nominated for the RT Reviewerās Choice Best Fantasy Romance of
2016 and is a finalist for RWAās RITA Award. The second book, The Edge of the Blade, released December 27, 2016, and
is a PRISM finalist, along with The Pages
of the Mind. The next in the series, The Shift of the Tide, will be out in August, 2017. A
high fantasy trilogy taking place in The
Twelve Kingdoms world is forthcoming from Rebel Base books in 2018.
She also introduced a new fantasy
romance series, Sorcerous
Moons, which
includes Lonenās War,
Oriaās
Gambit, The Tides of BĆ ra,
and The Forests of Dru. Sheās begun releasing a new
contemporary erotic romance series, Missed
Connections, which started with
Last Dance and continues in With a Prince.
In 2019, St. Martins Press will
release the first book in a new fantasy romance series, Throne of Flowers.
Her other works include a number of
fiction series: the fantasy romance novels of A
Covenant of Thorns;
the contemporary BDSM novellas of the Facets
of Passion;
an erotic contemporary serial novel, Master
of the Opera;
and the erotic romance trilogy, Falling
Under,
which includes Going
Under, Under His Touch and Under Contract.
She lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico,
with two Maine coon cats, plentiful free-range lizards and a very handsome
Doctor of Oriental Medicine.
Jeffe can be found online at her website: JeffeKennedy.com, every Sunday at the popular SFF Seven blog, on Facebook, on Goodreads and pretty much constantly on Twitter @jeffekennedy. She is represented by Sarah Younger of Nancy
Yost Literary Agency.
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