Smashwords Summer Sale!

At one minute past midnight Pacific time on July 1, the special Smashwords Summer/Winter Sale promotion catalog goes live on the Smashwords home page.  Readers can browse the catalog and search by coupon code levels and categories.  At the stoke of midnight Pacific time on July 31, the catalog disappears.

The coupon codes only work at Smashwords, not at retailers served by Smashwords.

Be sure to check this out! Both Debbie Mumford and Deb Logan have titles in this sale. Some are even FREE!

Remember, the sale lasts the entire month of July 😀 😀

Posted in Promotion | Tagged , | Comments Off on Smashwords Summer Sale!

Show-Off Saturday: DRAGONS’ FLIGHT

This week I’m featuring my most recent novel, the second in my Sorcha’s Children trilogy, DRAGONS’ FLIGHT. Enjoy!

DRAGONS’ FLIGHTDF Gold Cover-2x3
by Debbie Mumford
Audience: Romance: Fantasy | Dragons | Shape-shifter | Novel

In this second volume of the Sorcha’s Children series, shifter siblings Brandubh and Morag take flight. Brandubh travels to King Leofric’s court to discover if his destiny lies in the human realm, but his visit is marred by the news that dragons have destroyed a human village. King Leofric charges the dragon-shifter with seeking out and subduing the renegades, but the stakes increase when Brandubh meets a fascinating female dragon … who considers humans vermin to be exterminated.

Meanwhile, Morag shows no interest in life among the humans, preferring to live life on the wing. But can she convince the male dragon of her choice that she is the bond mate he has been waiting for? Only time will tell if these dragons will succeed in mating flights.

Note: This novel is intended for mature readers.

Electronic Edition Publication Date: March 2013
Buy Now: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Smashwords

DRAGONS’ FLIGHT

Nictitating lids shielded Brandubh’s eyes from the lash of glacial wind. Air currents pushed against his wings, and he savored the effort his downstroke required. Joy welled in his heart as he fought the sky for dominance. He was dragon. A lord of the sky. He caught a stream of wind and relaxed his wings into the most advantageous angle to drift along its unseen course.

Moonlight sparkled on the ice below, turning the glacier of his homeland into a diamond-studded treasure. A hoard to tempt the soul of any dragon, but Brandubh was not any dragon. Brandubh and his five siblings were a race apart, a clutch of shifters born of an impossible love. Their father, a mighty black dragon named Caedyrn, had been the heir apparent to the Rex of the ice aerie when he lost his heart to a valiant human wizard: Sorcha.

With more courage than caution, their mother, Sorcha, had sought the Heart of Fire. She believed the legendary amulet would provide her people with protection from the ravages of dragon-kind. Unfortunately, Sorcha had neglected to count the cost of possessing an object of such power. The Heart of Fire transformed her into a pearly pink dragon — which led to the clutching of Brandubh and his siblings.

Created of a mix of human and dragon blood, the siblings had demonstrated their unique abilities within moments of hatching. The adults in their world had found it challenging to raise hatchlings who could pop from dragon to human to dragon in the blink of an eye, but the Rex and his assistant had managed the feat. The shifter siblings had been raised in the ice aerie under the watchful tutelage of the Rex because the Heart of Fire, in a display of dispassionate power, had returned Sorcha to human form forcing Caedyrn to choose between his species and his love. He chose Sorcha.

The Heart of Fire had condescended to perform a last act before vanishing from the mortal realm, the transformation of the black dragon into a dark-skinned, naked, human male. The clutch of eggs the ensorcelled couple left behind had been adopted by the Rex in particular and the ice aerie’s flight as a whole.

Brandubh wrested control of both thoughts and wing. Pulling out of the comfortable skim, he circled the aerie a final time and arrowed toward Glengorm. He’d been apart from Aislinn and Taran too long. The time had come to see if humanity fit him as well as it did his married sibs.

Married. He understood the human concept of wedded fidelity. After all, dragons bonded for life once they chose their mates, but Aislinn and Taran had chosen human mates. Brandubh liked Ewan, the Rossali prince his sister Aislinn had chosen, and Senga, Taran’s wife, seemed a nice enough girl, but they weren’t dragons, weren’t even dragon-shifters.

He didn’t understand how Aislinn and Taran could bear to mate with non-dragons. Why, Aislinn couldn’t even mind-speak her mate. Taran and Senga had overcome that barrier due to Taran’s innate wizardry, but even so, the alienation from all things dragon made Brandubh’s skin crawl.

Brandubh shook himself to clear his head and concentrated on his chosen path. He would fly to Glengorm, present himself in human form to King Leofric, and then visit with his parents and each of his human sibs. He was determined to hold human form for at least three months. His record to date was the fortnight he’d spent in Glengorm after Taran’s marriage, but that had been two years ago.

Though it seemed every eligible female in the aerie had expressed interest in him, he had yet to find a dragon he desired to fly. Perhaps he, too, was doomed to mate with a human. The time had come to discover his destiny.

His long, rambling musings had brought him over the land of men. Despite the lateness of the hour, his dragon vision pierced the night’s dark veil and showed him neat rows of furrowed fields, tidy homesteads and pens of sleeping flocks. Leofric’s castle lay just over the next ridge of hills.

Sorting gently through available mind-links, Brandubh chose his father’s.

Father. Wake and hear me, sir.

Caedyrn’s adroit mind came alert beneath his touch.

What is it, Brandubh? Are you in danger?

Brandubh snorted a gout of fire into the headwind of his flight, but kept his amusement out of the link. If he were in danger, what could his father do? Caedyrn had given up his powerful body and the ability to fly.

All is well, Father. I have left the aerie to try my luck as a man. I will arrive soon.

Caedyrn’s link-aura relaxed.

I am pleased, my son. Your mother will be delighted to see you. A ripple of laughter spread across the link. And anything that delights my wife pleases me. I will meet you in the courtyard with appropriate garb.

Thank you, sir. I’ll be with you soon.

Brandubh released the link and scanned the countryside for the familiar sight of Leofric’s castle. His first visits to his parents had been accomplished in the claws of the Rex or one of his retinue, but that had been before Brandubh had learned to control his shifting. The sibs had been late learning to fly, because the Rex refused practice flights until they demonstrated control of their forms.

Brandubh retained foggy memories of his first visit to his human kin. The dragons had traded with local mountain folk for rush baskets in which to transport the hatchlings. The Rex had deemed it unwise to attempt a long flight clutching dragonets who transformed into human infants without notice. The younglings had been placed in the baskets where the vagaries of their shape wouldn’t endanger the journey.

There! He spied the castle, rising majestically from within encircling walls. Few lights glimmered in the castle itself, but fires burned orange and yellow from the watchtowers at the corners of the walls.

He drew nearer. A torch appeared in the courtyard, undoubtedly Caedyrn making his way to the practice yard where his dragon kin were wont to land. Brandubh angled his wings and descended to the world of men.

Welcome, Brandubh. Despite their physical nearness, Caedyrn greeted his son through their link. Human speech hurt dragon ears, and though the open air of the courtyard mitigated the pain, Caedyrn eschewed speech.

Without replying, Brandubh transformed. Where a great black dragon had stood, a dark-skinned youth crouched, naked and vulnerable.

Caedyrn stepped forward, flung a cloak around Brandubh’s shoulders and handed his son a bundle of cloth. “Why don’t we go inside? You can dress in the guardroom.”

Brandubh grinned and hugged his father. “The proprieties must be observed, eh? Even in the middle of the night?”

Caedyrn returned the hug and stepped back, a flash of white teeth acknowledging his son’s jest. “You know how humans are. Best to be properly garbed if we meet any in the corridors.”

Warmth flooded Brandubh’s heart. Even after all these years, his father still didn’t fully identify with the humans he lived among. Perhaps he had more in common with his sire than he realized. “Fine,” he said, eyeing the unwanted bundle. “Let’s see if I can remember how to fasten all these layers of cloth.”

Posted in Excerpts | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Show-Off Saturday: DRAGONS’ FLIGHT

Show-Off Saturday: DRAGONS’ CHOICE

Sorry about that! I was out of town last weekend and neglected to set my post up in advance.

As promised, here is the first volume of my Sorcha’s Children series 😀

DRAGONS’ CHOICE
by Debbie Mumford
Audience: Romance: Fantasy | Dragons | Shape-shifter | Novel

Sorcha and Caedyrn’s love has created a new breed of beings. Neither wholly dragon nor fully human, Sorcha’s children shapeshift at will. The six fledglings have been raised as dragons, but the time has come to explore their human heritage. Aislinn and Taran are the first to leave the ice aerie for the world of men.

Aislinn discovers the lure of sexuality amidst the intrigues of King Leofric’s court, while Taran learns the source of his debilitating malady. Both siblings face danger and prejudice among their mother’s kin, but they discover love as well. Dragons mate for life, forcing the young shifters to make a complicated choice.

Electronic Edition Publication Date: Sept 2011
Buy Now: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Smashwords

DRAGONS’ CHOICE

Aislinn paced the edge of the heights, unable to focus on the majesty of the surrounding mountain range. Conflicting desires warred in her soul. Behind her, the community of dragons stirred to life, and her dragon-soul longed to fuse itself to her kin, never to be parted. But the suppressed humanity at her core dared her to leap into the clear, cold sky and soar to a destiny no dragon could attain. The desire, no, the need to metamorphose sang in her blood and sizzled in her bones. Her time had come.

She glanced down her long, supple body and admired the sparkle of reflected sunlight on her midnight blue scales. Long years had passed since she, or any of her sibs, had worn human form. She and her brothers and sisters had transformed often in their youth, both here in the ice aerie that housed the flight of dragons and in the castle down in the land of humans where their parents lived. The ability to shapeshift flowed through their essence, and they delighted in startling those around them, whether human or dragon, with unexpected switches.

But this was different. Aislinn had never attempted to put on her human form and remain in it. She ruffled her wings in anticipation.

“Are you certain, little one?”

Keeva’s question echoed through Aislinn’s mind and startled her back to awareness of her surroundings. Her human thoughts had so subjugated her dragon sense, she’d missed the sounds of her surrogate mother’s approach.

“No,” she answered truthfully. “I’m not certain of anything…except the pull within my soul.”

She faltered and gazed out over the jagged peaks of her beloved mountains, seeking solace in their familiar solidity. Humans might consider the mountains cruel and merciless, but to Aislinn, they represented security and peace. The range protected her home, the dragons’ ice aerie. She’d never lived anywhere else.

With a twitch of her barbed tail, she twisted her head to meet Keeva’s level stare.

The mauve dragon had been the first sight to greet Aislinn’s eyes when she’d hatched, twenty long years ago. Keeva and the rex had raised all six of Sorcha and Caedyrn’s children, and the unusual hatchlings had required all the ingenuity the mature dragons could muster. The impossible mixture of dragon and human blood had mutated the entire clutch into shapeshifters.

Aislinn and her siblings had hatched with the in-born ability—one they’d been unable to control until they reached fledgling status. Fledging dragons learned to fly; shape control became a necessary prerequisite.

“We can’t have you popping over to human form a thousand feet in the air,” the rex had warned them.

The desire—no, the need to fly had forced Sorcha’s children to gain mastery of their fluid bodies. But always, without exception, their true form, the one in which they spent ninety percent of their time, had been dragon. Now, Aislinn intended to reverse her natural inclination.

“I don’t know if I can do this, Keeva, but I must try.” She lowered her head, stretched her neck toward the mauve female and nuzzled her dragon-mother’s jaw affectionately with her forehead. “Will you give me your blessing, honored one?”

“Of course, Aislinn. My blessing and my love go with you wherever you fly.”

An intense spike of alien emotion stabbed Aislinn’s heart. She longed to throw herself into someone’s arms and weep. Definitely time to fly. Dragon’s didn’t cry—but humans did.

She spread her wings and hurled herself into the bright morning sky.

“Give my love to Sorcha and Caedyrn!”

Keeva’s final thought rang in Aislinn’s mind. Her wings caught the wind, and she arrowed toward the land of men.

“I will,” she answered, “and I will return!”

*~*~*

 Sorcha found it difficult to settle to anything today. She’d attempted to concoct a potion to ease King Leofric’s rheumatism, but couldn’t concentrate on the spell’s fiddly details. Something was in the wind. Something momentous approached, and she knew she’d be uneasy until she identified the source of her restlessness.

Snatching a cloak from the peg beside her workroom door, Sorcha flung it around her shoulders and strode toward the courtyard. Perhaps she’d have clearer vision on the battlements.

You’re very twitchy today, my love, Caedyrn’s deep voice caressed the corners of her mind, and Sorcha smiled without missing a step. Her husband, the man who had given up leadership of the flight of dragons for her love, always knew her moods, even when he judged petitioners in Leofric’s hall.

A change is coming, she explained. I can’t tell you what it is, but I know it’s very near. Can you feel it too?

Aye, I can. Caedyrn’s thought slid effortlessly through her consciousness, but an inkling of unease trailed behind, confirming his awareness.

Sorcha reached the castle wall and climbed to the battlement. A guard observed her ascent, nodded to her when she gained the walkway and continued to patrol his assigned quadrant. Her fingers trailed along sun-warmed stone until she chose a crenellation and leaned against it. Though she gazed across planted fields, Sorcha fixated on her husband’s beloved face. Odd…Caedyrn had worn the form of human male for twenty years now, but she still pictured the magnificent black dragon in her dreams.

She sighed and pushed the memories of her dragon self to the back of her mind. Caedyrn, the man—dark-skinned, well-muscled, with close-cropped hair and eyes like the lake at midnight. A shiver of delight ran down her spine, and she whispered a blessing to the gods and goddesses for the gift of his love. Twenty years of marriage, and the mere thought of him still warmed her blood and provoked a delicious tingle that tightened her nipples. Their love crossed the boundaries of possibility and touched the mundane tasks of daily existence with the mystery of magic.

Sorcha scanned the landscape, but ignored the serene beauty of a countryside at peace. No wars ravaged this pleasant land, due in large part to herself and Caedyrn. She turned her attention to the skies and felt a flutter of anticipation—a tiny winged creature had captured her notice.

A bird, undoubtedly a bird, she told herself, though she strained to see more clearly. An unannounced visitation from a member of the flight was too much to hope for. Dragons kept their own company, rarely visiting the land of men unless called upon to fulfill the terms of the treaty Sorcha and Caedyrn had helped create. Sorcha still considered herself a member of the flight. She had clutched six dragon offspring, but rarely saw one of the magnificent beasts.

The flying speck continued to enlarge, and Sorcha’s heart thundered. Slowly, it evolved into something too large to be a bird. Gripping the stone parapet so hard her knuckles whitened, she opened a link to Caedyrn, all thoughts of his duties in the king’s hall scattered.

I’m judging a fairly complex case at the moment, he responded to her excited touch. Can this wait?

A dragon, she sang into his mind. Caedyrn, there’s a dragon approaching, and it isn’t one of the usual messengers.

She experienced a flare of anticipation and a mingled whiff of grief, which he quickly masked.

I’ll be right there.

Sorcha scrutinized the soaring dragon, drinking in the flawless beauty of its flight. Her imagination soared, and she relived the exhilaration of wind in her face: eyes protected by nictitating membranes; the stretch of well-conditioned muscles lifting her body, straining against and finally working with the powerful currents in the air; like a fish, delighting in the struggle to move upstream amid invisible currents, defying the flow’s repeated attempts to swamp her efforts.

Gods and goddesses, she missed flying, and she had only worn dragon-form a few months. She could barely imagine Caedyrn’s sense of loss.

He’d forfeited so much for her. Her lover, her husband, the other half of her soul had given up the freedom of the skies to crawl along the earth with her. She understood his sacrifice—she had been a dragon long enough to learn their customs, mate with Caedyrn and clutch his eggs—but her deprivation couldn’t compare to his. He had been born to the skies. A powerful amulet had transformed her.

The winging dragon came close enough to be seen properly, and Sorcha’s ruminations about her mate’s loss ceased abruptly.

“Aislinn,” Sorcha cried and then pressed her hands to her mouth. She laughed, pleased her daughter was still too far distant for the sound of her voice to irritate tender dragon ears. Open air absorbed the most disturbing reverberations of human speech, but Sorcha would curb her vocal enthusiasm until her daughter had transformed.

Odd that the pitiful mewlings of humanity caused dragons pain when their own bellowing roars and deep gravelly voices didn’t. True, they seldom used vocalizations in the aerie, preferring mind-speech, but Sorcha knew from experience their own sounds were not painful.

She frowned, grappling with the conundrum she had all but forgotten. Perhaps the higher pitches of human speech, or maybe some small thing inaudible to humans, caused the problem. After all, dogs heard things no human could detect. Perhaps dragons had similar abilities.

Sorcha glanced at the sky and pushed the puzzle of dragon hearing aside. Aislinn would land momentarily. Sorcha spun around, ran toward the stairs…and collided with Caedyrn.

“Who is it?” he asked, grabbing her arms and steadying her so she didn’t pitch off the battlement. “Can you tell yet who has come?”

“It’s Aislinn,” she cried, pulling free and racing down the stairs and along the wall. “One of our children has come at last. Oh, Caedyrn!”

Sorcha jostled the gatekeeper aside and lunged for the postern gate.

“Open it quickly,” called Caedyrn to the confused gatekeeper, “or my wife might tear it down.”

Sorcha scowled over her shoulder, but relaxed immediately. Caedyrn also pelted toward the gate. Laughing, she stood aside while the gatekeeper pulled the door open and bowed her out.

With Caedyrn at her side, Sorcha picked up her skirts and fairly flew to the meadow where her dragon-kin were wont to land.

“If I’d known she was coming, I’d have had a gown ready for her,” she said, pulling her own cloak from her shoulders.

Caedyrn laid a restraining hand on hers and said, “Allow me, my love. You keep your cloak and stay warm. Indulge a father’s need to protect his offspring.”

She resettled her cloak and grasped Caedyrn’s hand.

Aislinn landed softly before them and shimmered from midnight blue dragon to raven-haired woman. Sorcha snatched the offered cloak from her husband, who waited with averted eyes, and sprinted the last few steps to her daughter’s side.

“You’re cold,” she said and wrapped Aislinn in the fur-lined cloak. “Just look at the blue tinge to your skin!”

Aislinn laughed, a musical, lilting melody. “No, lady mother,” she said, hugging Sorcha with flight-toned human arms. “I thank you for the cloak’s warmth, but my skin is always a little blue. I’m a blue dragon after all.”

“Of course,” Sorcha said with a laugh, thrilled to have this grown daughter safe in her arms. “Welcome home, Aislinn! We’re so glad you’ve come.” She closed her eyes and savored the smell of fresh air and sunlight that clung to her daughter’s hair. “Caedyrn, come greet your daughter. She’s well enough covered for a father’s hug.”

Caedyrn strode to them and wrapped them both in strong, dark-skinned arms. “Welcome, child.”

Emotion vibrated in his husky voice, and Sorcha realized tears streaked her own face. The trio stood locked in a multi-armed embrace, unable, or unwilling, to relinquish the long-denied physical contact.

Finally, Aislinn squirmed and said, “Perhaps we should take this indoors?”

Her parents laughed, wiped their streaming eyes and led her to the castle gate.

“Gatekeeper, guards, everyone within sound of my voice,” boomed Caedyrn. “Attend me! This is the Lady Aislinn, our daughter. Extend to her every courtesy you would to the Lady Sorcha or myself.”

And so they entered the courtyard of the keep to the sound of cheers and hearty applause, and Sorcha smiled to see the rosebud blush bloom on her child’s blue-tinged cheeks.

Posted in Excerpts | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Show-Off Saturday: DRAGONS’ CHOICE

Show-Off Saturday: SORCHA’S HEART

For the next three Saturdays, I’ll introduce you to Sorcha and her children 😀 Enjoy!

*~*~*

SORCHA’S HEART
by Debbie Mumford
Audience: Romance: Fantasy | Dragons | Shape-shifter | Novella

A legendary relic, a dragon-wrought amulet, the Heart of Fire may be the salvation of her people, and Sorcha is willing to pay any price to obtain it, but when she discovers the price is the loss of her humanity, she learns caution too late. Only a hero can save her now, but he isn’t human.

Electronic Edition Publication Date:  Aug 2011
Buy Now: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Smashwords

SORCHA’S HEART

Chapter One
The Heart of Fire

Sorcha knotted her fists so tightly her knuckles whitened. She glared at her mother across the rough oak worktable. “When are you going to acknowledge me as a fully capable wizard? I’m not an apprentice anymore. I don’t need your permission to seek the Heart of Fire.”

“Fine,” Elspeth shot back, “but I’m warning you this is a mistake. The Heart of Fire is dangerous.” The small, compact woman stretched to reach the braid of garlic hanging from the beam above her head, yanked a bulb loose and tossed it to her daughter.

“So is this war!” Sorcha caught the bulb by reflex, slammed it on the table and separated out three cloves for the strengthening potion. Her gaze never left her mother. “Don’t you realize how powerful dragons are? If Leofric continues on his present course, he’ll push them too far. They’ll wipe us off the face of the earth.”

Fear flashed across Elspeth’s face, and Sorcha knew that her mother agreed; the King’s recent aggressive actions could have serious repercussions.

Sorcha’s mood softened. She picked up her paring knife and began to chop the cloves, pondering the enigma of the woman who had given her not only life, but a heritage of magic. Because of that heritage, strangers often assumed they were sisters rather than mother and child. Elspeth’s long, dark hair sported only an occasional strand of gray. Trim, active, healthy. These words described both her and her mother. Neither of them possessed the lush curves so desired by other women at court, but neither really noted the lack, being too concerned with the practice of magic to worry about attracting the opposite sex.

Elspeth’s bright green eyes glowed with fervent belief and wily intelligence. Sorcha shared her mother’s fervency and intelligence, but not her eyes. She had inherited her unknown father’s eyes; deep blue, with an exotic slant that engendered frequent comparisons to cats’ eyes.

“Yes. I do understand,” Elspeth said with calm assurance, “and I’m trying to convince Leofric how dangerous his present policy is.”

Sorcha opened her mouth to push home her advantage, but Elspeth held up a slim hand to stem the flow of words.

“But that doesn’t mean I’m willing to sacrifice my only child.” She leaned forward, eyes wide, pleading and vulnerable. “Leave the Heart of Fire alone. It might end this war, but at what cost? Sorcha, you have no idea what that amulet will require as payment for its power.”

A shiver ran down Sorcha’s spine and she made a reflexive warding sign as she wiped her hands on the tattered hem of her potion-making apron.

*~*~*

The quiet waters of the isolated lagoon unnerved Sorcha. She knew a distant barrier reef protected the soft sand from the harsh pounding of the tide’s ebb and flow, but she longed for the accustomed roar of surf—and home. The skirt of her simple shift and tunic tugged damply at her ankles as she prowled the water’s edge. Her eyes darted warily from the aspen thickets that climbed the hill to the north, to the open path winding southward among the dunes covered in beach grass. She might have been the only living creature on the earth.

As much to reassure herself of her own existence as for something to do, she bent to stare into the unnaturally still water. A cool breeze tickled her nose with the scent of seaweed, and tugged a few wayward hairs from her tightly woven braid as she gazed at her reflection in the sparse predawn light.

Tension mounted as she waited for the perfect moment. Unable to remain still, she straightened, searching the sky’s melting darkness. Only fading stars and dawn’s awakening color met her restless gaze.

She must complete her quest, must recover the Heart of Fire. Humanity’s existence depended on her success.

The warning, when it came, took the form of tingling skin as all the tiny hairs from neck to wrists rose in unison. The dragon soared into sight above the aspen covered hill, and Sorcha fought the instinct to run. Instead, she stood her ground and watched him land at the edge of the lagoon. Gods and goddesses, he was longer than the house she shared with her mother! He had to measure thirty feet from his deadly looking teeth to the triangular tail-tip that splashed the lagoon’s still water. He folded leathery wings flat against glistening black scales, and turned his massive head, piercing her with a fiery gaze.

“Greetings, little wizard,” he said, his rough voice conjuring wind-swept crags and the barren isolation of frozen wastes. “It seems the Heart of Fire requires more than one witness to its rebirth.”

“Y-you know about the Heart of Fire?” she stammered. Her heart thundered, causing the pulse in her temple to throb and her ears to ring. She fought to calm herself, to retain the razor- edge of her intellect as she confronted her hereditary enemy. Human versus dragon; their skirmishes consumed her homeland, and now that King Leofric had initiated a more aggressive policy for his knights, she feared humanity’s annihilation.

The dragon’s huge maw twisted in what she hoped was a smile. “Of course, little wizard. Who do you think forged the medallion? Human wizards could not bend the stone’s power to their will long enough to contain it in a prison of gold.” He snorted at the thought and ejected a thin finger of flame. “Only a flight of dragons could create the Heart of Fire.”

“If wizards are so weak,” she said, standing tall, chin high in defiance, “why has it called me to bring it to light?” Understanding dawned, and she continued recklessly, ignoring the lingering smell of sulfur, “You are here to witness what I’ve been called to do!”

The dragon lowered his head and studied her closely. “Well spoken, little wizard.” He paused, blinked, lower lid rising to cover his slit-pupiled, red eye. “What is your name?”

Sorcha swallowed hard and tried to ignore the fear that knotted her stomach. “I will not trade names with a dragon. Now stand aside. I have work to complete.”

He jerked his head back and unfurled his wings. The brightening sky vanished behind a curtain of shadow.

“You dare insult me? Order me like a common dog?” His words thundered, rending the morning’s soft peace. “I could devour you in a single bite!”

Though her legs wobbled and threatened to collapse, Sorcha stood her ground. She clenched her jaw to keep her teeth from chattering, and prayed she wouldn’t squeak when she found her voice.

“But you won’t,” she said, amazed at the coolness of her tone. “The stone called me to find it. You need me. If you didn’t, I’d already be dragon fodder.”

The massive beast refolded his wings and the returning light warmed Sorcha’s taut face. He shuffled his four huge clawed feet and settled himself on the lagoon’s sandy beach.

“Very well,” he said. “Call the stone. I’ll not hinder your efforts.” He laid his huge head upon his front feet, reminding Sorcha of her mother’s sleek black tomcat.

She clung to her mother’s image; Elspeth wouldn’t let a dragon destroy her hard-earned competence. Sorcha’s heart rate slowed and the pounding in her temple subsided as she focused on her mother’s teaching. Concentrating on the runes she’d recently discovered and taken such pains to memorize, she turned to face a large rock that broke the water’s surface a short distance from shore. She removed her leather boots, tossed them into the stiff beach grass, and stepped forward into the water, placing her bare feet in firm contact with the threshold between land and sea.

She lifted her hands in supplication and chanted the runes, giving voice to long dead syllables of an incantation ancient before her kingdom sprang to life. Behind her, she felt, as much as heard, the dragon’s low rumble as he hummed a counterpoint to her invocation.

The runes of summoning wove the triune threshold (not sea—not land; not day—not night; not dragon—not human) into a knife with which to rend the fabric of time and space. The water surrounding the rock sizzled and vaporized as the granite glowed red, turned to lava and flowed away to congeal on the lagoon’s floor. A blue-green sphere remained, hovered above the steaming mass for a moment, and then flew to Sorcha’s outstretched hands.
A cool mist of salt water kissed her fingers before the sphere evaporated and the medallion fell into her palm. Gold filigree encircled a fire opal the size of her fist. The whole dangled from an extremely long, finely wrought, gold-link chain.

Elation overwhelmed her and she whooped with joy, squeezing the medallion to her chest. The Heart of Fire pulsed in her hand. She felt the raw power straining to be free, to escape the control of the sigil-worked gold filigree setting. She had done it! Despite her mother’s dire warnings…

“Well done, little wizard,” growled a whirlwind of sound. “Now give the stone to me.”

Gods and goddesses, she’d forgotten the dragon! Sorcha whirled to face her adversary, agile mind searching for avenues of escape.

“The stone? Oh, well,” she said, desperate to buy time. She’d think of something. She had to think of something! “I don’t think so. I mean, I can’t just hand over this much power.” Her voice rose to an undignified pitch. “You could decimate my people!”

His laughter, a landslide of pebbles skittering down a slope of shale, jeered at her. “You don’t have a choice. I needed you to bring the medallion out of hiding, but now that task is finished.”

He rose above her, a mountain of muscle, black and menacing. In sheer defiance, Sorcha lifted the Heart of Fire and dropped its chain around her neck. The medallion thudded against her left thigh—and she knew she’d solved nothing. The dragon would slice her in two with one swipe of his claw and pull the opal from her quivering flesh.

“No!” The cry thundered across the lagoon, lashing Sorcha’s mind with echoes of utter wretchedness. Her vision darkened and she wondered who had screamed; it had sounded more human than draconic.

Waves of pain rolled over her, tumbling her body against an unaccountably hard surface. She couldn’t breathe, couldn’t think, didn’t understand what was happening. Air. Her lungs seared with a desperate need for air. She clawed her way to rational thought, forced her chest to expand, and gasped lungfuls of sweet, moist air into her tortured body.

She lay heaving and panting on the beach. The familiar scents of salt and seaweed, far from comforting her, inspired a violent urge to retch. She concentrated on quelling her unhappy stomach and attempted to lift her head. Pain swamped her mind and she desisted. Keeping her eyes tightly shut, she dug her claws into the damp sand, and willed her body to relax.

“Rest, little one. I am here.” The dragon’s voice, a soft rumble of distant thunder, comforted her. She wondered why, but before she could think of an answer, exhaustion conquered her anguished body and she slept.

Posted in Excerpts, Writing | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Show-Off Saturday: SORCHA’S HEART

Show-Off Saturday: HER HIGHLAND LAIRD

It’s Saturday again! This week we’ll do a bit of traveling through time and space … to medieval Scotland 😀

HER HIGHLAND LAIRDHer Highland Laird
by Debbie Mumford

Audience: Romance: Scottish | Time-Travel | Novella

Cat Logan, a young American with a recent degree in medieval literature, travels to Scotland to discover her roots. She finds more than she bargained for when a mysterious silver casket (rumored to hold the desiccated heart of a long dead Scottish laird) transports her back in time to the 1400s and the man whose heart she holds in her hands.

Note: This novella is intended for mature readers.

Electronic Edition Publication Date: July 2012
Buy Now:
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Smashwords

HER HIGHLAND LAIRD

Cat Logan wandered through Edinburgh in a dreamy glow. The musical lilt of the inhabitants’ speech delighted her almost as much as the easy juxtaposition of ancient and contemporary architecture. Everywhere she turned, she discovered new reference points for her recently acquired degree in medieval literature, as well as her clan heritage. The Logans of Lasterrick had left an indelible mark on Edinburgh.

Each day brought new revelations, and she blessed Gran Da for his extravagant graduation gift. Life had been hard for both of them since her father’s death, but Gran Da had been determined to celebrate Cat’s achievement in style.

“I’m so proud of you, Cat,” he had said, draping an arm around her shoulders. “I only wish your mother and father could be here to share this day.”

“Me, too, Gran Da.” Cat nestled into her grandfather’s embrace and blessed the fates who had given her into this dear old man’s care. Gran Da had welcomed her father and his infant daughter home after Cat’s mother had died. Complications from Cat’s entrance into the world had robbed her father of his wife and Cat of her mother, but she’d never felt any stigma of blame. Gran Da had been there for them. He had provided warmth and stability in Cat’s life while her father had pursued his military career.

But David Logan, a high-ranking air force pilot, had died in a training accident last year. Cat and Gran Da had both been devastated by his loss.

As if to punctuate Cat’s need for a European vacation, her ex-fiancé Brent Myers had chosen the night before graduation to announce he’d fallen out of love with Cat and into bed with Ariana Davidson.

She’d given that scumball four years of her life. Why had he asked her to marry him if he hadn’t been certain she was the woman he wanted to spend his life with? Why had she accepted? How could she have missed a character flaw that allowed such blatant disloyalty and unfaithfulness? Obviously, her judgment sucked when it came to good-looking men.

Gran Da had taken the defection in stride.

“I’m sorry, love,” he said quietly when Cat informed him of the broken engagement. “I won’t discuss it further, if that’s yer wish, but ye need tae ken I’m nae surprised. I’ve a bit o’ the sight, an’ I’ve always known ye were destined for an unexpected path. Nothin’ about Brent was unexpected.

“Go tae Scotland, darlin’ girl, an’ if opportunity arises, ne’er look back. I’ve a feelin’ in me bones…Scotland holds yer future.”

*~*~*

On her third day in Edinburgh, a previously undiscovered lane beckoned. She hesitated. If the most ancient byways were also the narrowest, allowing the least penetration of the summer sun, this one qualified as the oldest of the old. The narrow passage drew her, the near-compulsion reminding her of Gran Da’s remarks about second sight. Curiosity won out over caution, and she followed her instincts to a shabby, little establishment near the midpoint of the narrow lane.

Cat studied the grimy window of the ancient thrift shop. The interior appeared as black as the tarnished silver door knocker. Did she really want to push past the door and breach the musty interior? She’d passed a reputable-looking antique shop two blocks back; perhaps she should browse there.

Yet, the same indescribable something that had pulled her past the clean, well- kept shop and into this narrow lane prompted her to linger.

Follow your heart, her grandsire’s voice whispered in her mind. But why would her heart lead her to a second-hand junk shop in a forgotten district of Edinburgh?

She’d never learn the answer if she was too cowardly to cross the threshold. Expelling a sigh, she straightened her shoulders, grasped the doorknob, and turned.

An old-fashioned bell tinkled, and she stepped into the little store. A single bulb dangled from the ceiling, barely lighting the dark recesses of the room. Shelves towered against the walls, and stacks of shabby furniture obscured the floor. Cat wended a careful path between tottering stacks of rubbish.

She lingered over a yellowing baptismal gown for an infant, fingering the fine lace and admiring the tiny, precise stitches of the hand-sewn seams. Hard to imagine that all clothing had once been sewn by dedicated women. And men. Mustn’t forget the tailors of the world.

“May I help ye fin’ somethin’, miss?”

Cat gasped and dropped the gown. She hadn’t noticed anyone in the gloom of the shop. An elderly man with stringy, grey hair and stubbly jaw stood behind a sturdy wood counter — the only flat surface in the shop not covered with a jumble of knick- knacks.

“No thank you,” she said with a little smile. “I’m just looking.”

“Nae many Americans stop to browse in my wee shop.”

“My accent gave me away?”

“Aye, lassie. Nae a body will mistake ye for a Scot.”

She sighed and turned back to the baptismal gown. “That’s too bad because my roots are here.”

“Ahh,” he breathed. “Sae you’re one o’ those. Searchin’ for yer ancestry, are ye? What’s yer surname?”

“Logan. I’ve traced my family back to Sir Robert of Lasterrick.”

“Well, then,” he said, smug satisfaction lighting his homely face, “Ye’ve come tae th’ right shop. I happen tae hae a relic of Sir Robert’s only son, Sir Eideard Logan. We’d name him Edward today.”

He rounded the counter and scuttled between rows of merchandise to a tall shelf at the back. Opening a ladder, he climbed to the top with surprising agility and poked his hand behind a grimy vase. Carefully, he withdrew his prize and returned to the floor of the shop.

Cat sidled over to join him, her heart beating a quick tattoo against her chest. “What is it?” she asked, breathless with anticipation.

“A silver casket,” he replied, revealing a tarnished silver box roughly the size of a ream of paper.

Cat stretched out her hand to stroke the embossed lid.

“’Tis rumored tae contain Sir Eddie’s heart.”

“Eww!” She snatched her hand back and buried it in her pocket.

The shopkeeper laughed, a full, rich sound that bounced off the ceiling and skittered among the piles of rubble.

She smiled wanly. “Don’t you know what’s in the box?”

“Nay, miss. ’Twould take a braver man than me tae open this box. ’Tis cursed, ye see.”

Now it was Cat’s turn to laugh. “Cursed? You believe in such nonsense?”

The man nodded gravely. “Aye, lassie, I dae, an’ sae should ye if ye ken what’s good for ye.” He turned back to the ladder and started to climb.

Cat’s heart leapt. Her instincts screamed that the silver casket held a secret — that its contents had drawn her to this dusty little shop.

“Wait,” she cried. “Please.”

The man paused. He studied her face with narrowed eyes, glanced at the casket, and then nodded. Stepping back to the ground, he led the way to his counter and gently placed the casket upon it.

Cat followed him, and this time her hands ignored her brain. They cradled the tarnished box, stroking the ornamented surface of the lid.

“Here now, miss. Ye’re gettin’ filthy. Let me clean ’at up.”

Gently, he disengaged the casket from her reluctant fingers and wiped it with a soft cloth. The more he rubbed, the more Cat itched to hold the casket again. Finally, when she could bear the separation no longer, she pulled the box back and stared at the now gleaming lid.

“Are those words?”

The shopkeeper adjusted his glasses and cocked his head. “Aye. There’s an inscription.”

“Can you read it?”

“Probably. But nae if ye clutch it sae.”

A nervous giggle escaped her lips. “I’m sorry. I don’t know what’s gotten into me.” She shoved the casket across the counter to him.

He turned the lid to the light and read in a halting voice, “Catriona, return to me my heart. Lastalrig Castle. By the bright of the moon. Eideard.”

Apprehension seized Cat’s throat and squeezed. Her vision swam, and her fingers tingled. She clung to consciousness by sheer force of will.

“What….” Her voice croaked and died. She moistened her dry lips, cleared her throat, and spoke again. “What was that name?”

He stared at her with open curiosity. “Catriona. It’s th’ auld form of Katherine.”

“I know. My name is Catriona Logan.”

Posted in Excerpts | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Show-Off Saturday: HER HIGHLAND LAIRD