Storm of Reckoning
The Reckoners:

"Ghosts, aliens, danger, romance, and a not-cat. As Lisa McGarrity might say, 'what's not to like?'"
--Anne Bishop, author of the Black Jewels series

"...A fast-paced urban fantasy romp that sizzles, amazes, and utterly enchants."
--Julie Czerneda, author of Rift in the Sky


Books


 

Changespell Legacy


Changespell LEgacyBaen Books June 2002
ISBN: 0-7434-3544-3
cover art by Carol Heyer
Sequel to Dun Lady's Jess and Changespell


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excerpt

Arlen meant to be home before now.

With the Lorakan mountains looming on the western skyline to remind him just how much land lay between here and Anfeald, he calculated the distance to the nearest travel booth versus the time before Jaime's next visit.

He wasn't going to make it.

From one world to another she would come, from Ohio on Earth to Anfeald in Camolen, and she'd find him. . . 

Absent.

Not that anyone would be able to tell her why--not Carey, his close friend and head courier, who thought Arlen attended the special field calling of the Council of Wizards in Siccawei.  Not his two apprentices, who thought the same.  Not the Council itself, with a renewed emphasis of confidentiality after the events of the previous summer, the rogue wizards and their mage lure-enhanced powers run amok in Camolen with far too many people chatting about the particulars.

They'd overcome that trial--Arlen and Jaime, Carey and Jess, and Dayna, ever twiddling with her forbidden raw magic on the sly.  It had been more the others than Arlen himself, who'd found himself hampered by his adherence to Council strictures and then by recovery from a long-distance blow dealt by an embellished and revengeful wizard.


The thought of it made him wince.  Without the mage lure, Willand would never have been able to touch him.  And even knowing she'd had it. . . 

Well, he'd underestimated her.

But those others--his friends--armed more with determination and wits than conventional magic--had taught the Council a lesson about going pro-active.  About shaking off the strictures of their endless debates to choose action--even to the point of taking to a trail in Siccawei without him.

So here Arlen stood, gazing at the moonrise over the mountains with three layers of heartland jackets over his Jaime-gifted silken long underwear and OSU sweatshirt and a blanket from the road inn wrapped tightly around his shoulders on top of it, his breath frosting the air and riming his thick grey-shot mustache.  A porch board creaked under his foot as he shifted his weight, reminding him of the need for quiet with an inn full of grouchy winter travelers at his back.

He could send a spell message through the wizard's Dispatch service, but that would only reveal his location to the alert and nervous Mage Lure-runners he'd come here to thwart.  They had reason for their nerves--the old border guard spells against them had worked once, and with the study he'd done this past week, they'd soon work again.

But not until he made it home.  Back to warmer Anfeald in south-central Camolen, to the winter-burnt pastures and hills, the turned-over garden fields, the deep-honed respect for his wizard's power from the Anfeald's landers and the casual irreverence from Carey in spite of it.  And Jaime.  Commuting between worlds, rearranging her life and her life's work to spend nearly half her time here with him.  In another day she'd be sitting in the rocker by the thick-silled open window of his personal rooms, one spell heating the room and another keeping the heat from escaping.  She'd have the old black and white cat on her lap while the young calico male tried to impress her with his antics and headstands.

But she'd be waiting for him.  Wondering, perhaps worrying, probably annoyed on top of it all.

Like most powerful wizards, Arlen rarely pulled himself up into a saddle.  Mage travel with transfer booths, town coaches, shoe leather. . . they all came more easily.  Even so. . . in the morning, he'd see about securing a horse, one to get him to the nearest transfer booth three townlets down the road in Amses.

Jaime would be waiting.  And for once, the rest of Camolen rested quietly around him.

~~~

Branches warped and oozed, merging into one another.  Winter-flattened ground cover of fall leaves compressed into a blanket over the earth and melted into the roots of the tree, swirled old golds and dulled crimsons into silvery bark to obscure the small den-hole there.

An uneasy ground squirrel bolted for that hole.

Half the squirrel made it home.  Rich brown fur merged into the red-gold-silver patch where its life ended, following twisted eddies of matter.

Hoofbeats sounded in the cold winter air.  Dun mare, deep buckskin with black points, a black line down her spine, and wiser eyes than most.  Alone, unhindered save for the padded leather girth and chest band holding a courier's pouch over her withers, she pranced to a stop, sampling the air with widened nostrils and the raised neck of a wary posture, alert for movement, for scent, for something on which to pin her attention.  To define the wrongness she felt here.

After a moment, she snorted and moved on, her equine vision unable to perceive the frozen patch of distortion by the side of the trail.   Too still, too close for her to see out of that eye without at that angle.

With a flick of her tail, Dun Lady's Jess left the birth of death and destruction behind her, and never knew it was there at all.


"...A splendid example of how speculative fiction can let us deal with difficult topics at a safe remove. It's not preachy, it's not heavy- handed, it's just a wonderful picture of people screwing things up and then trying to unscrew them.... Most highly recommended."
--Hypatia's Hoard


Praise for Changespell:

"Doranna Durgin is one of the freshest new voices in fantasy fiction. Her style is clean, uncluttered, and effortless. Changespell is a full-bore, straight-ahead, fast and furious read. I want more!"
--Jennifer Roberson, author of the Karavans and Sword Dancer series

"Durgin tells this deeply insightful and touching tale with a deft clarity. Her eye for detail will delight and astonish you..."
--Hypatia's Hoard


Praise for Dun Lady's Jess:

"....Dun Lady's Jess is unique.   Durgin has created a character who is utterly believable as both horse and horse-in-human-body.   The setup is brilliant: the magic that causes the transformation is not in the horse, but external, and the creature that is Dun Lady's Jess must adapt, must find an identity that works in both paradigms.   Humans who encounter her, in either body, must also adapt to the reality that created her and that she represents.  She cannot be, any longer, just another mare...she cannot be, ever, just another woman...."
--Excerpt from Elizabeth Moon's Forward for Dun Lady's Jess


"A thrill ride with a fantasy twist, neatly done by a knowledgeable author - short, sweet, and paced at a gallop, Dun Lady's Jess can't help but to win you over."
--Janny Wurts

"Horses, heroics, and magic--a great combination! I thoroughly enjoyed reading Dun Lady's Jess, a spirited and daring novel. I couldn't put it down."
--Kristen Britain, author of the Green Rider series


"Dun Lady's Jess is a wonderful read for those who are horse fans and those who are just plain fantasy fans or fans of great writing."
--Josepha Sherman, bestselling author/editor


"Dun Lady's Jess is everything a great fantasy ought to be: Exciting, moving, and utterly original. Doranna Durgin has spun a marvelous tale, set it in a world that feels as real as our own, and populated that world with characters who will stay with you long after you read the final page. An excellent book, which I highly recommend."
--David Coe, author of Winds of the Forelands & the LonTobyn Chronicle


"Jess is a tale of wonderfully diverse and riveting characters embroiled in extraordinary events, told with a deftness and care few authors can achieve. Once you begin, you won't be able to put it down until you know what happens -- and then you'll wish it never stopped. I highly recommend it."
--Diana Pharoah Francis, author of Path of Blood


"Dun Lady's Jess is an adventure story with heart. It's a unique idea, imaginatively explored. The characters are charming, and humanly flawed. The accurate equestrian touches are a pleasure to encounter, and Jess' reactions, particularly while she's still getting her feed under her, are surprisingly yet completely believable. Doranna Durgin offers the reader an unusual viewpoint of impressive versimilitude."
--Vonda McIntyre, Nebula and Hugo Award-winning author of The Moon and the Sun


"Durgin never fails to entertain with solid characters, good action, well-conceived plots, compelling narrative -- and her expert background in horses always provides a real -- and realistic! -- treat for readers. Jess is one of the most complex and likeable characters in fantasy fiction."
--Jennifer Roberson, author of the Karavans and Sword Dancer series