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Storm Lords - 5 - Guardian's Redemption - Marie Harte
Prologue
Tanselm, two years ago
Tanselm’s heart beat in time with the battered longing of lovers long parted. Light and Dark
were the most basic components of life imbued in her chosen champion and the woman
he’d once, and still, loved.
Some of her inhabitants had an inkling of what Tanselm truly was, but most lived in
oblivion of the gift she’d given them. They walked on her grasses, cut down her trees and
inhaled the sweet air tinged with the perfume of pretty pink leraffes, flowers that bloomed
year round.
Tanselm was the earth that fed their flora, the stone with which they made their homes, and
the waters which washed away their sins. Partial to neither Dark nor Light, she needed both
in order to flourish. She was a land with sentience, and with the feminine need to bear fruit,
both in nature and in her human children.
A thousand years ago the Dark Lords had ruled her. Blood spilled, wars were fought, and
the Light Bringers took control. Gentler than the Dark Lords, they nevertheless devoured
her magic as greedily as their enemies. Years passed and the divide between Light and
Dark grew stronger. Shadows barely whispered over her lands, giving her little respite from
a steady drain on her magic.
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Recent battles for dominance over what she would have freely given hurt her greatly. She
weakened more and more as Dark and Light continued to fight, yet she held out hope her
champion would do what she needed him to. But he couldn’t do it alone.
“Damnation. That I hadn’t expected.” Her champion gripped his sorcerer’s staff tightly and
stared in shock at a woman who suddenly appeared from out of nowhere. Tanselm couldn’t
contain her relief, and the wind sighed through the trees. Right now, in her fertile woods,
Light and Dark fused between these two people who had the capacity for greatness if only
they’d listen to their hearts.
Arim, her champion and sorcerer, a stubborn Light Bringer warrior. Lexa, a Dark Lord full
of cold magic and a love needing to be let loose. Two pieces of a puzzle long forgotten,
long denied their perfect fit.
Tanselm welled with love, feeling a kinship to the slight female and her connection to the
Dark. Lexa called upon the Darkness Tanselm poured into her with undue haste. The land
felt Lexa’s joy and returned the sentiment whole-heartedly.
“My lucky day. The Guardian of Storm and Killer of Shadow. I’m humbled.” Lexa snorted.
As petite as Arim was large. Pale of skin where he was darkly tanned. Solitary as opposed
to Arim and his family. Equals in every sense, if they’d let themselves just be.
“Light’s breast. You have balls showing yourself here.” Light arched from the stone atop
Arim’s staff to his free, upraised hand. He wore his power well, a sorcerer and warrior with
strength to spare.
Yet Tanselm knew he’d felt her wavering strength these last centuries. She had tried, but
she couldn’t spare him all her pain.
“More balls than some,” Lexa said with a sneer. She sounded harsh, but her feelings
vibrated with passionate energy, a calling to her other half, the man she wanted to deny.
Years ago Lexa and Arim had been inseparable, the answer to Tanselm’s divide. Then
innocent blood had tainted her grasses, destroying her tenuous solution to bridge the gap in
the Spectrum. Arim and Lexa had fought. Lexa left. Arim remained. They both mourned.
Life moved on, yet it remained the same. Damaged, declining. Tanselm could feel the sense
of loss in both her chosen saviours. To survive, they needed each other, whether they knew
it or not.
“You come to me on my own lands. To what, apologise?” Arim sounded incredulous. “Still
small-minded and cold-hearted, eh, Blue?”
Tanselm felt his scorn and Lexa’s pain. The Dark Lord’s blue eyes blazoned with power.
Negative emotions gave her strength and Tanselm anticipated another battle, but this one
the land encouraged.
Lexa reached deep inside herself and further into Tanselm. She thrust her hands forward,
blue flame leaping from her fingertips towards Arim.
He absorbed the blow and remained standing. Ice encrusted his front and his skin turned
blue with cold. He stood vulnerable, but Lexa didn’t attack again. The part of her that still
hoped waited, and Tanselm felt hope as well, that the woman and the man might come to
some accord.
Then Arim melted the ice, tapped his staff, and shot Light straight at Lexa’s heart. She
narrowly avoided that blast and the next, and the two opponents danced around each other
as if choreographed.
Tanselm hummed with pleasure as their energy tangled, combined and grew stronger.
Beautiful. Wonderful. Healing.
“Why did you return?” Arim asked before hitting his Dark Lord squarely in the chest. He
took her off her feet, and Tanselm felt Lexa’s pain as her own. Arim frowned and took a
step back. He doesn’t know why he cannot press forward, and therein lies the problem.
“You can’t be here. This is sacred land. Why didn’t Tanselm warn me of your coming?”
Because you would have prepared to destroy her. If he knew how often Lexa had visited
since her ‘banishment’ several centuries ago, he might destroy Lexa in truth. Tanselm had
masked Lexa’s visits, welcoming the headstrong female’s healing Darkness.
“The land did warn you,” Lexa lied. “I felt it. But my energy combined with yours when I
entered through the void.” A truth, of sorts. Unlike most Dark and Light energy that
cancelled each other out, Lexa’s Dark and Arim’s Light attracted one another. A perfect
union, if only these stubborn humans would accept their appointed roles.
Lexa recovered while Arim experienced, once again, an unbidden lust for her, a distraction
that cost him. She blasted him, stealing his breath, and
kicked him to the ground. Her foot held him in place while he fought her powerful Dark
magic.
“Your precious Storm Lords will die one by one when ‘Sin Garu wins. A Dark Lord once
again in charge of Tanselm. He’ll kill everything you love, everything that is pure and
Light in this land. And he’ll do it because you aren’t man enough to see the truth.”
“In your fucking dreams.” Arim fought her hold but Tanselm made no move to help him
escape.
Finally. Someone understood what she’d been trying to warn her children about for years.
As if the divide in the Spectrum weren’t bad enough, ‘Sin Garu, a scourge upon the living,
had only grown more powerful with each passing year. In the last century, the evil Dark
Lord had amassed an army of Darkness. His Netharat: wraiths, Djinn and monstrous
Shadren, creatures that walked in both Darkness and Light, waged war on anything Light
they could get their claws into.
“Yes, ‘Sin Garu will kill us all. You need to make changes, you fhel. But you’re too
bigoted to see what I clearly can.” “Oh? Is your perspective so much better from Malern?”
Tanselm flinched and the ground under the pair rippled. She wasn’t the only sentient land.
Malern existed, a world too steeped in Darkness to create balanced fruit. Too often his
children killed and destroyed with ease. Foreia was better, a Shadowed world, and Krell as
well. Poor Earth had all but died out, its magic nearly depleted by the greedy humans who
dwelled there.
“Malern? No, I’m talking about Earth, where I’ve been living on and off amidst those
hapless xiantopes; beings of no magic make perfect victims for powerful Dark Lords.
Imagine what ‘Sin Garu will do with Earth once he has Tanselm under his control. Your
suffering is just the beginning.”
Yes, tell him, child. Except Tanselm could feel Arim’s resistance. Instead of heeding
Lexa’s warnings, he took them as threats. “I’ll kill you for this,” he warned through gritted
teeth.
“Promise?” she whispered in a husky voice. “Maybe next time you think to trample a girl’s
heart and banish her from her own home, you’ll think about the repercussions. Send your
sister and nephews my regards.”
She vanished into the between, the void between worlds, in an instant. Lexa left no
goodbye, only a pool of Dark energy where she’d been standing. Tanselm absorbed it, as
well as Arim’s pain. His anger did her some good. He’d always manifested his darker
emotions in swirls of energy, feeding Tanselm though she knew he was unaware he did so.
Offering him what comfort she could, Tanselm wept her sorrows, rain pelting the land. He
stubbornly refused to go after Lexa. No matter how much she tried pushing him to seek
what he truly needed, what she truly needed, Arim couldn’t hear her.
Time wore on, and Tanselm began to lose hope.
Over the next two years, ‘Sin Garu’s attacks began. Storm Lords died. Light Bringers and
Netharat bled on her lands, poisoning her with their hate. Chaos grew, until only four Storm
Lords, the queen, and Arim remained to heal her fragile state. Two of the Storm Lords took
foreign affai, foreign brides, from Earth. The other two, thank the Balance, found a Shadow
Dweller and a Djinn, a Darkling, to love.
Still, the gap remained. For Tanselm to be whole, she needed equal amounts of Darkness
and Light. She needed Lexa. She needed a miracle.
Chapter One
Philadelphia, present day
Arim Valens clenched his jaw as he glared at the saturation of eager shoppers crowding the
festively decorated mall. He’d finally had Lexa in his grasp. No more battles ending in
stalemates or conflicts never resolving. With all that had been happening at home, her
capture was the one goal he could meet, the one thing he’d looked forward to more than
any other.
He’d had her within reach…only to lose her when she’d teleported right out from under
him. By the Light’s Mark! The time had come for answers, and to take that final step into
annihilating ‘Sin Garu, to finally free Tanselm from the threat of ever-present destruction.
Tanselm—a parallel world with its own sentience, a land filled with magic, vibrant colour
and abundant life. As opposed to this… Philadelphia.
City of brotherly love, my ass.
“Well now, looks to me like you could use my help.”
Arim turned to face the bearer of the smugly uttered words, barely refraining from turning
the Djinn, a damned Darkling, into a dirt stain over the grouted tile over which they stood.
Jonas Chase looked like any other shopper during this harried season. Tall and laden with
muscle, he wore his light brown hair cut in shaggy waves over a chiselled face. His brown
eyes danced with humour, and he crossed his arms, clad in a blue knit sweater over snug
denim jeans. He could have passed for a xiantope, like all the others looking for bargains
around them, save for the powerful black aura that Arim’s magic clearly allowed him to
see.
Arim sighed. Had he been reduced to this? Tanselm’s most powerful sorcerer, a Light
Bringer warrior, needing help from what he’d once considered the enemy, a creature of
Dark? “If you want to help, tell me where to find Lexa. And trust me when I say you want
me to find her before I lose my temper.”
“In like what, the next two seconds?” Jonas scoffed. “And everyone says Darius has the
temper in the family.” A cute blonde walked by and gave Jonas the eye. He grinned and
raised his brows, apparently not at all inconvenienced by this out of the way trip to Earth.
At this very moment, Arim should have been in an important meeting with his sister Ravyn,
Tanselm’s overqueen, and with his four nephews, Tanselm’s last Storm Lords. Also known
as the Royal Four, now that the rest of the Storm Lords were dead, his nephews sat poised
to become kings, each commanding one of Tanselm’s territories. In addition to surviving
the upheaval of so many of their family dead, the princes had recently taken royal brides.
They had problems aplenty just trying to keep the land hale and hearty.
Hell, they had enough on their plate without Lexa, another enemy, gone missing. Trying to
find ‘Sin Garu and finally destroy him before his evil army killed any more of Tanselm’s
people was priority number one. Until the next overking was chosen, protecting the affai of
the Royal Four ran a close second. But since each of his nephews had finally come into his
own power, the responsibility to protect their brides fell on them.
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