**Rise of the Mage by Keary Taylor**
Good Morning,
Everyone! So thrilled to see you all today! We have another new-to-me author
and book! Please allow me to feature on the blog Keary Taylor and her latest
release, RISE OF THE MAGE … And HAPPY RELEASE DAY!
**KEARY TAYLOR **
**BIO**
Keary
Taylor is the USA TODAY bestselling author of over twenty novels. She grew up
along the foothills of the Rocky Mountains where she started creating
imaginary worlds and daring characters who always fell in love. She now splits
her time between a tiny island in the Pacific Northwest and Utah, with her
husband and their two children. She continues to have an overactive imagination
that frequently keeps her up at night.
To
find out more about Ms. Taylor please visit:
**RISE OF THE MAGE**
Publication
date:
March 24, 2020
Series: Resurrecting
Magic #1
Genres: New Adult, Paranormal
Genres: New Adult, Paranormal
**BLURB**
College is hard—classes,
homework, bullies. But, being the daughter of renowned professors, I grew up at
Alderidge University and was on track to have an easy start to my freshman
year. Until I met Nathaniel Nightingale.
Aloof and mysterious, Nathaniel’s hands were covered in scars that told me he had a violent history. He started asking questions about my own, and then dark secrets in our family lines collided after a strange discovery in the library. We found words with power, and they unleashed abilities in the both of us that had been lost to the world.
Turns out, the witch trials weren’t entirely the product of mass hysteria. As far as we can tell, almost every mage was wiped out – killed for their knowledge and their capabilities. And now I have to wonder if my mother’s disappearance is related.
This is dangerous. It’s feels impossible. We have the weight of an entire lost race resting on our shoulders.
But we’ve got this. Together, we’ll bring it all back. Together, we’ll resurrect magic.
Aloof and mysterious, Nathaniel’s hands were covered in scars that told me he had a violent history. He started asking questions about my own, and then dark secrets in our family lines collided after a strange discovery in the library. We found words with power, and they unleashed abilities in the both of us that had been lost to the world.
Turns out, the witch trials weren’t entirely the product of mass hysteria. As far as we can tell, almost every mage was wiped out – killed for their knowledge and their capabilities. And now I have to wonder if my mother’s disappearance is related.
This is dangerous. It’s feels impossible. We have the weight of an entire lost race resting on our shoulders.
But we’ve got this. Together, we’ll bring it all back. Together, we’ll resurrect magic.
**EXCERPT**
“Did
you know that while the Salem witch trials were the last and only here in
America, that there is still official litigation against witchcraft in parts of
the Middle East?” With those long
fingers of his, Nathaniel opened the book and flipped a few pages. He opened to a section and handed me the
book, pointing to a particular passage.
My eyes scanned it, searching for what he wanted me to see.
It
was a list of the names of the men and women who were killed at the Salem Witch
trials. And there, almost to the bottom,
was the name of Mare McGregor.
My
blood chilled, seeing her name there, listed among the accused and
executed. I knew her name. I knew her story, as much of it as had been
recorded by her son, my great-something-grandfather, Collin. But it was always so stark, the reality that
she’d been hung. Killed.
“The
entire world has a history of witch hunts,” Nathaniel said, turning to the
bookshelf again. He grabbed another
book, opening it to a section. “Egypt
and Babylonia.”
He
took another book, opening it and laying it on his desk. “Across the Holy Roman Empire.”
My
heart rate picked up. Sweat broke out on
my palms.
Still,
Nathaniel grabbed another book and another.
“Russia, India, and even Africa to this day.”
I
watched Nathaniel, who stood with his back to me. His shoulders were tight. His head was bent low. His words were growing lower with each one spoken.
Gingerly,
almost reverently, he reached for another book.
The red binding was worn, and there were no words left. Gently, he grabbed it, and he held it to his
chest, his arms carefully wrapped around it.
“It
is estimated at around 60,000 people were killed for being witches over the
course of three hundred years, in western Europe and central Europe alone. Tens of thousands more in Asia, countless
more in Africa. Miraculously, only
nineteen here in America.”
There
was a deep sound rushing in my ears and it took me a moment to realize it was
the sound of my own blood. There was a
heavy feeling of anticipation and uncertainty in my gut.
Nathaniel
turned back toward me, and in his eyes, I saw something big.
“I
cannot confirm that I am a direct descendant, but there was a William
Nightingale killed during the Lancashire witch trials in England in 1612.” His eyes were fixed on me, but I could tell,
he wasn’t seeing me. He had fallen into
history, into ancestry. “There are
thousands of stories of accusations and trials and deaths.”
“Yes,”
I said, wanting to bring us back to a place that wasn’t so dark. I wanted everything to go back to being
light. “And they were the result of mass
hysteria and superstition. They wanted
something to blame for bad harvests and hard financial times. A lot of innocent people died.”
Nathaniel’s
focus returned to me. Three seconds
passed, and finally he gave a little nod, but it didn’t seem like a complete
act of agreement.
He
stepped forward, and gingerly, he laid the book in his arms on the desk. I recognized it then as the one from the
library, the first day we had met.
“You
said you cannot read Gaelic,” he said in a low voice. He opened the book and looked down at it,
gazing at the words with wonder. “But
maybe you should try again.”
“Nathaniel,
I-” I began to protest. But he looked up
at me and begged me with his eyes.
So,
I crossed to the desk to stand beside him.
I looked down at the words, remembering the silly experience with it
before, now weeks ago. I could recognize
letters, as I’d concluded before, some of them were of Latin origin. But I couldn’t read any of it.
“I
haven’t learned Gaelic in the last few weeks, Nathaniel,” I said, looking over
at him. He looked at my face intently,
as if he were waiting for something spectacular to happen. “I still can’t read it.”
Gently,
he reached for my hand, wrapping his fingers around my wrist. I didn’t know what he was doing, but I
decided I trusted him enough to humor him.
He
brought my hand forward, and gently, he set my fingertips down on the edge of
the pages.
It
was as if I’d blinked, and it turned into a different book.
One
moment it was in unreadable Gaelic. The
next, it was in perfect English.
I
blinked, leaning in closer to the book.
A
simple matter of will and asking, levitation is one of the simplest forms of
magic.
My
eyes read the line without a second of hesitation or translation.
I
ripped my hand back from the book and took half a step back.
Instantly,
the book was once more in a language I could not read.
The
room was utterly silent. So quiet it
pushed in on my ears and the only sound was my own heartbeat.
I
felt Nathaniel’s eyes on me. I felt
meaning filling the air. I felt
anticipation. But also, momentous
confusion.
Cautiously,
I reached my hand forward again. Filled
with fear and wonder, I touched the edge of the pages.
In
levitation, most users have certain affinities, whether they be metal, earth,
wood, life forms, etc.
Because
it was the scientific method of proving a hypothesis, I removed my hand one
last time and the words became unreadable.
I
touched the pages, and my eyes relaxed as the words became readable.
“You
can read it, too.”
I
looked up at Nathaniel and startled when he stood there with his right hand
held up, his fingers generally pointed at the ceiling. And floating around his fingertips there were
three paper airplanes, swirling, dipping and rising through the air. And that air around his hand had
this…shimmer. Almost as if glitter
floated in the air. But I couldn’t quite
focus on it. And the air seemed
more…golden.
“What
kind of trick is this, Nathaniel?” I asked, my words hoarse and quiet.
I’d
never seen this look in his eyes. They
were filled with…excitement. And
hope. He shook his head. “It’s not a trick, Margot,” he said. He waved his fingers, and the airplanes set
off toward the opposite end of the solarium.
Gently, they floated toward his bed, flying in a circle over it. They followed each other in a line, doing a
flip in the air and then flying over to the couch, where they dipped down low,
soaring beneath it, before they aimed back at Nathaniel. There, they swirled around his fingers once
again before they gently floated down to the table and landed on the book. “It’s in my blood. And I believe it’s in yours, too.”
**GIVEAWAY**
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