I have a new 3D design store online at Shapeways. I will be adding new designs on a regular basis. Many of the designs are inspired by my novels. There are some sculptures, but most is assorted forms of jewelry such as pendants and bracelets available in numerous colors and materials. https://www.shapeways.com/designer/mphi55
Graphic artist, designer, illustrator, painter, animator, photographer, videographer, sculptor and author. Visit my website at: http://www.michaelpaulhoward.com
Friday, February 5, 2016
The Little People Excerpt II
Adam was daydreaming a little when he
thought he caught movement out of the corner of one eye. It was in one of the
larger trees, not too far from him. He hoped it wasn’t more buzzards. He had
forgotten to bring his gun with him. He casually scanned the area and tried to
look up in the tree without seeming to look up in the tree. The breeze picked
up a little and moved some of the branches out of the way. This revealed
something that Adam was not expecting. At first, he thought he was seeing
things. He closed his eyes for a moment and then reopened them to see if his
vision cleared. What he had seen before was
still there.
Adam casually looked around again and
tried not to stare, but his gaze kept falling on the small figure that was
partially obscured by the tree’s foliage. The figure was sitting on a thick
limb high up in the tree. Not wanting the figure to know he had spotted it,
Adam casually looked around again and pretended he hadn’t noticed it. After
taking a few more quick glances, he realized that the figure was a small girl
or woman.
She was sitting casually and had her
legs crossed, dangling beneath the limb she was sitting on. Her small hands
rested on the limb beneath her. When Adam looked at the girl again, she stared
right back at him. She was of a slight build and was almost as tall as Adam.
She had dark reddish brown skin, black hair that was pulled back into a
ponytail and had small, slightly pointed ears. She was wearing some sort of
brown leather woven tunic or dress. Feathers hung down from a band she wore
around her forehead and she had shoes made from the same material as her dress.
Her shoes came up above her ankles and had laces that crisscrossed all along
the top. Leather fringe dangled all along the tops of her shoes. Her clothing
was elaborate, but decorated in colors that blended in with the forest. She
wore what looked to be a stone knife in a sheath at her belt. Its handle was
wrapped in leather.
Adam tried to not look at the figure,
but couldn’t help himself. He had never seen anyone quite like this before.
Several minutes passed with him trying not to look at her. As he watched the
figure, she stood on the limb and then abruptly jumped off of it. She landed on
another limb far below the first one, but jumped off of this limb also. The
distance the girl fell was astonishing to Adam. A normal person could not have
fallen such a great distance without getting hurt.
It was a very long drop from the
limbs to the ground. Adam guessed it to be almost thirty feet to the ground
from where the figure had been sitting on the first limb. Adam was amazed at
the feat. The small girl landed softly in a crouch just a little ways down the
hill from where he was sitting on the rock. She had made no sound at all. She then
stood and turned toward him and said, “You can see me, can you not?”
Adam nodded his head slowly. “Am I
not supposed to?” He asked nervously. The small woman’s voice was almost
musical when she spoke. She did not sound like a child, but did not sound quite
like an adult either.
“No, most humans can not see us
unless we want them to. It is rare for one of your people to be able to see
us.” She told him as she moved up the hill toward him. She placed one hand on
the hilt of her knife as she drew near. Adam felt a little threatened by her
actions and the unusualness of it all. He also noticed that her movements were
graceful and fluid. He stood up as she came closer to him. He tried to put the
rock between them, but did not think it would do much good. He was ready to run
if she tried to attack at him, but after seeing her jump, didn’t think he could
outrun her.
The Little People can be purchased online in eBook and 5x8 paperback.
http://www.michaelpaulhoward.com/thelittlepeople.html
The Little People can be purchased online in eBook and 5x8 paperback.
http://www.michaelpaulhoward.com/thelittlepeople.html
The Ruby Helmet Excerpt I
Chapter
3
Everywhere
upon the cold stone floor of the cave were piles of human bones. A large, dark figure slowly picked its
way over the grisly remains. It
moved silently, searching for the beast that lived there. The beast had wrought terrible
devastation and brought great loss to the surrounding area.
A
foul, putrid stench of death and decay emanated from deep within the dark, dank
catacombs in which the figure now transverse. The smell caused the figure to reel with disgust. Knowing the awful power of its enemy
however, the figure shook its head to try and clear it so it could continue on. This caused its long dark hair to
shimmer slightly in the dim light.
Reflections flickered across the silvery, well-worn ornamental helmet it
wore.
The
figure’s upper body was covered in plate mail armor. It glittered faintly from the few thin beams of light that filtered
down into the mouth of the cavern.
The figure’s dark leather breaches and soft, high riding leather boots
barely made a sound as it softly padded its way toward the ominous entrance to another,
larger cavern.
In
the figure’s strong muscular hands it held a large, heavy, double bladed
battleaxe. The axe was made of the
finest steel crafted by dwarven blacksmiths in the Timgranok Mountains. The axe shone with a faint, slightly
visible silver glow. This gave it
an eerie appearance in the darkness.
The
figure’s presence in the cavern was not a natural one. Rats scurried before it as it worked
its way toward the next room. The
beast within the cavern was waiting, knowing full well that a victim had
entered its lair. It waited
hungrily for its enemy in the comfort of its own home, confident that it would
be feasting well this night.
Rakkon
knew full well the extent of the situation that he had gotten himself into. He moved forward cautiously, listening
strenuously for any sign of the beast he knew to be lying in wait.
While
traveling south to join King Tredebould’s growing mercenary army in the ongoing
war of the Creahaul, Rakkon had been talked in to ridding a small town named
Caerloon of a vicious reptilian killer that had been preying upon the town’s
inhabitants. The creature crashed
its way into homes late at night and dragged its victims off into the nearby
mountains. It had left many bloody
trails and screaming on many a night.
Rakkon had agreed to do the dangerous task, for a small fee of course. He was always glad to help others in a
time of need, especially if there was a profit to be made.
Rakkon
was a warrior, born and bred. He
grew up in the Anarest Mountains in the barbarian warrior clans of the Teargor people. He was first among his clan in battle
prowess and in war knowledge. He
had decided to leave his people when he had become bored. Most of the people back home were at
peace, so the only fighting was between his kin. Rakkon had set out for the kingdoms of the South, seeking
adventure and wealth.
He
continued to move forward slowly, listening for any sound that might give the
creature away, or give him some kind of advantage over it. He had trailed the beast from where it
had made its last kill. It had taken a small farm family in a house just outside
of the town. The trail of blood and
entrails was not too difficult to follow, especially in the bright moonlight. It had led right up to the mouth of the
cave that served as its lair.
Rakkon
moved to the left of the large cavern entrance and stopped suddenly, standing
very still. There was a faint
rasping noise like sandpaper being rubbed over rough wood. The sound was coming from directly
ahead and to the right of the chamber.
He strained his eyes and could just make out the moonlight faintly
reflecting off of hardened, leathery scales.
Rakkon
edged his way forward, and prepared himself. He reached deep within himself for the place of the warrior,
bringing forth the inner being that one sought when entering into combat. It was the part that showed no mercy,
and knew only the power and surge of battle. He reached down into his muscles, sinew and bones. Power flowed out of him into the cold,
hard steel that he held in his hand.
Rakkon
reached down into a pouch that hung from his thick, black sword belt. He withdrew a small round object. It was smooth and spherical, about the
size of a dove’s egg. The object
was pale white in color.
He
turned his head away from the direction of the beast, then drew his arm back
and threw the small sphere toward it.
The sphere spun toward the large reptile and exploded upon impact. It released a powerful blast that
produced a large ball of bright, white light that seemed to cling to the face
of the reptile.
Rakkon
quickly attacked what he could now see was a large pseudo-dragon. Pseudo-dragons were winged beasts made
of pure hatred. An evil created
out of total darkness. They came
from a time when evil ran rampant over the world, many centuries ago. Evidently, many of these creatures
still survived, plaguing all of the humanoid races, good and evil alike.
Pseudo-dragons
were one of the toughest of the smaller dragon types to kill. This one was about fifteen feet long
from snout to tail tip. It had two
wickedly curved feet with sharp talons, a set of small leathery wings, and a
poison tipped tail that was razor sharp.
It bared sharp, ivory teeth that could rip a man’s head off in one
bite. Upon seeing the deadly
creature, Rakkon knew he faced an extremely dangerous foe.
He
took full advantage of the dragon’s momentary blindness, and dove in on its
right side, seeking a vulnerable spot on the underside of its soft
underbelly. Rakkon knew that
attacking the monster’s rough scaly outer hide would have taken too long, even
with his enchanted blade. He would
not be able to avoid the deadly spiked tail for very long.
He
came in fast, quicker than most would have believed for a man of his size. He ducked under one of the dragon’s
flailing wings and came in with a vicious cut to the beast’s upper chest. Rakkon attacked as it reared up while
trying to fight off the light that had momentarily blinded it.
Fortunately
his attack was true to its mark.
It opened up a terrible wound in the monster’s chest. This caused it to bellow with a loud
roar of pain and fury. It had
never been so easily thwarted. The
cut itself gushed out a thick, warm, green ooze. The ooze stung and burned
Rakkon’s skin wherever it touched him.
The
reptile swung around toward the source of its agony and lashed out with one of
its large talons. Its attack cut a
vicious arc in the air right in front of Rakkon’s face. It caught him with a glancing blow to
the side of his helmet. The attack left a large gash in it. The blow sent Rakkon reeling back,
toward the cave wall. He stumbled
on a stalactite and lost his balance, toppling to the cave floor.
Rakkon barely noticed the follow-up
attack of the beast’s deadly tail.
It had come around, just missing pinning him to the wall. It would have ended his short,
adventurous career. His fall had
inadvertently saved his life.
He
quickly rolled to one side and came up swinging. He aimed a powerful uppercut to the beast’s exposed neck. The monster had closed in on him, hoping
to finish off the vile human that had so painfully wounded it. It had expected Rakkon to be knocked
unconscious from the crushing blow it had landed on his helmet.
With
almost superhuman speed, Rakkon sliced the monster’s neck from ear to scaly
ear. In finishing through with its
bull like charge, the dragon bowled Rakkon over even as he was ending its
life. It threw him into the cave
wall once again.
The
beast thrashed about and crashed onto the floor of the cavern. It went through its final throes, dying
just as violently as it had lived.
The Ruby Helmet is available online to purchase in eBook or 5x8 paperback.
http://www.michaelpaulhoward.com/therubyhelmet.html
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