Book Blitz: The Hag on the Wind by Laura J. Underwood
Genre: Fantasy
Publisher: Eggplant Literary Productions, Inc.
Date of Publication: 10/28/2013
ISBN: 978-1-932207-47-7
Kindle 978-1-932207-48-4
Word Count: 22,000
Cover Artist: Roan CarterBook Description:
Ginny Ni’Cooley just wants a peaceful, quiet life. But quiet is hard to maintain when one’s mentor is a ghost who died a lush and a lech. And peace isn’t to be found when the locals expect their local mageborn to banish monsters and help infertile couples conceive.
It’s that last bit that is posing the most trouble for Ginny of late. Marman the pig-herder--once an unwelcome suitor--now wants Ginny to help him and his wife conceive, and doesn’t believe her when she says it’s beyond her powers.
While blawing aboot the lea…
She summons the gale,
And the rain and the hail,
And rattles the windows with glee…"
Auld Liam sat on the steps of Talon's
Tavern, singing that song at the top of his lungs as Ginny Ni'Cooley walked
briskly past on her way to the baker's shop.
"Howt awa," Manus
MacGreeley wind whispered to her ears.
"'Tis not even noon, and Auld Liam is already deep in his
cups."
Ginny frowned and ignored the mage
spirit of her former mentor. She knew
better than to answer him when there were so many about. The folk who lived in Conorscroft thought
that she had banished Manus' spirit long ago.
And while he was wise enough to stay invisible, she just wished he would
not speak. What if someone heard
him? It would do her reputation as the
protector of this small hamlet no end of ill.
For that matter, she wished that Auld
Liam would stop his off key wailing.
Thistle howled along bouncing up and down enthusiastically on the end of
his tether. At least Thistle and I are
alike in mind that Auld Liam has a voice like a crow, she thought.
The old man grinned, revealing his
one remaining tooth, and howled back, causing a number of the folk in the
market square to turn and stare.
Ginny winced and hurried on, dragging
Thistle. She should have left the moor
terrier locked in the cottage while she traded her eggs for bread, but the last
time she did so, he found her store of dried beef and ate until he looked like
he would pop. Thistle snapped fiercely
at the old man who just laughed and shouted, "Yer dog has nae ear fae good
music, Mistress Ni'Cooley."
Ginny wanted to say that neither did
Auld Liam. Instead, she sought distance
in the hopes of getting Thistle to calm down before they reached the bakery.
"Uh, oh," Manus
whispered. "Better make haste,
lass."
"What?" Ginny said before
she thought better. She looked over her
shoulder expectantly.
Two figures were practically running
across the square towards her now. One
was a tall, willowy young man with pale hair, dull squinty eyes and a pocked,
pasty face streaked with mud. The other
was a short stocky woman with a florid face who heaved so much her breath fluttered the ragged strands of
salt and pepper hair.
Horns, Ginny thought. It was Marman MacSty and his wife Wycie
Ni'Clachan, the last two people in Conorscroft that she wanted to deal with at
the moment.
Ginny tried not to catch their eyes,
but it was too late. Marman waved an arm
and shouted loudly, "Ginny, Ginny!
Wait!"
She grimaced, crossed her arms as she
stopped, and turned to face them fully, wearing her sternest frown.
"Yes?" she asked stiffly,
hoping they would remain downwind and save her the trouble of having to use
magic to change it. Marman mucked pigs
for the young Laird MacFarr, and the stench of the sty was always on him. And since he and Wycie had wed over a year
ago, the odor clung to her as well.
"I need that potion I asked ye
about," Marman said.
Ginny frowned. "Marman, I don't make potions. I have told you this before."
"But, we wants a baby,"
Marman said. "A little-un ta carry
on me name. I know you can help us. Master MacFarr says that's what mageborn do
best—help folks with things they need."
He reached for Wycie's hand as he
spoke. Wycie glared at Ginny as though
measuring the mage woman's worth in a fight.
Ginny could not help but wonder what she had done to make Wycie despise
her so.
It was on the tip of Ginny's tongue
to say that some folks should not have children, but she stopped short of
speaking those thoughts aloud. Without
softening her expression, she looked at Marman and shook her head.
"Marman, I have also told you
that I cannot make an infertile woman or man fertile. That is something that only the gods can
change. Now, I really must be on my
way."
"But you have to help us, mage
woman!" Wycie suddenly snarled.
"You have to, you have to, you have to!"
"Wycie," Marman said as
though trying to sooth her.
"Wheesht, woman, don't be so rude to Mistress Ginny…"
Wycie jerked free of Marman and fixed
Ginny with such a fiery stare of rage that Ginny took a step back, uncertain as
to what Wycie might do while angry.
Thistle growled a warning. Wycie
made fists of her hands, pumping them up and down like a small child having a
tantrum.
"You're mageborn so it's your
job," Wycie added. She stopped
pumping her hands to cross her arms and glare.
"It is not a matter of
obligation, of which I have none," Ginny said. "It is a matter of ability. I cannot help you, Wycie. I'm sorry, but no magic can."
"She lies!" Wycie said, and
with a shout, she stooped down and scooped up a clod that resembled horse
droppings. "Mageborn can do
anything. She lies because she doesn't
think we're worthy!" Wycie flung
the clod at Ginny and shrieked.
"Adhar clach!" Ginny
hissed, barely in time. The clod smacked
into a shield of air just inches from Ginny's face and splattered harmlessly.
"You have to make me a
baby!" Wycie screamed and flung herself at Ginny.
Thistle lunged at the woman, snapping
his jaws. It was all Ginny could do to
hold the moor terrier back, much less cast a spell in her own defense. Fortunately, Marman must have realized that
attacking the only mageborn for several leagues around Conorscroft would not be
wise. He threw his arms around Wycie's
middle and stopped her flight. She
continued to scream like a beansidhe and flailed the air with her fists. Ginny saw small stones at her feet jumping up
and down as though reacting to Wycie's rage.
She flicked mage senses at the pig man's wife and felt a faint hint of
latent mage essence laced strongly with the element of stone. She can't be
mageborn, Ginny thought, though in truth, many Keltorans possessed a hint of
the blood in them, left over from ancient time.
It just did not always manifest when they matured.
"Stupid, stupid, lying bogie
woman!" Wycie shrieked. "You
will make me a baby or I'll…I'll…"
Ginny turned on her heels and fled
through the thickening crowd of onlookers.
She had not expected so many to be in from the fields this early in the
day, but there they were, gathered like carrion crows watching a carcass for
signs of life.
"I'll make you pay!" Wycie
wailed. "Make her pay! Liar!
Bogie woman! All mageborn are
liars!"
Ginny made a mental note to herself
to take the long path back to Tamhasg Wood to avoid another confrontation with
Wycie.
About the characters in The Hag of the Wind
Ginny and Manus are not new characters to most of my readers. They first appeared in "The Bargain," the leading short story in Marion Zimmer Bradley's Sword and Sorceress 14. Marion was in many ways, my literary mother, and she seemed to adore their adventures because she bought two more for Sword and Sorceress and one for the magazine. In some ways, it was writing for the Sword and Sorceress series that gave birth to these two. Marion was always looking for interesting characters, as well as women who could stand on their own two feet, so I tried to write a tale in which a woman who just wants a little peace and quiet finds her life constantly interrupted by the machinations of a spirit who happens to also have been her mentor in life. The problem was that the spirit had gotten himself into a bit of a pickle by making a bargain with a creature of the shadow worlds, and while Ginny could have let him pay the price (it would certainly have gotten him out of her hair), she knew that she owed him for setting her free of her own life.
About the “mageborn” in The Hag of the Wind
Mageborn are something of an enigma. The power is passed through the generations in the blood, and it awakens usually when a person hits their teens. Some find their power earlier, some later and some not at all, though they sometimes have the ability to sense magic and spellwork--just depends on the bloodline from which they descend. Their awareness of the magic that is part of the world starts to manifest then, and while some embrace it, others find themselves hating it. Being mageborn slows the aging process, creating a race of folk who often seem to live forever. Not all mageborn are created equal. They are as varied as the creatures from which they descended. Some bloodlines might birth a mage or two in every generation, while others might not see a mageborn birth for several generations
About
the Author:
Laura J. Underwood has been
writing and publishing as far back as she can remember. Her earliest stories were selected by Marion
Zimmer Bradley for the SWORD AND SORCERESS anthologies, and her first novel ARD
MAGISTER came out in 2002 from Yard Dog Press.
Since then she has seen the publication of nearly 300 short stories,
novels, novellas and other stuff. She
currently lives in East Tennessee where she works as a librarian.
Facebook: Laura Jean Underwood
Livejournal: http://laurajunderwood.livejournal.com/
Website: http://www.sff.net/people/keltora
Thank you for hosting our title on its release day!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for hosting my latest book HAG OF THE WIND.
ReplyDeleteLaura J. Underwood
Your welcome!! Happy Release Day!! Thanks for stopping by The Simple Things in Life!!!
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