About this Site
Create your own website today!
Update your website
Vote for this Site
Visit My Chat Room
Popular Popups
Jukebox
Message Board
Classified Ads
Statistics
Refer This Site
To A Friend
Home

Animorphs
Animorphs
Links Awakning
Walkthrus
Zelda Links Awakning
Level One Tail Cave
Level Two Bottle Grotto
Level Three Key Cavern
Level Four Anglers Cave
Level Five Catfishs Maw
Level Six Face Shrine
Cards
For Sale
Codes
1080 Codes
Aero Gauge
Aerofighter Assault
Banjo Kazooie
BioFreaks
Doom 64
Extreme G
Extreme G2
Forsaken 64
Iggys Reckin Balls
Everworld
Ever World
The Books
Search for Senna
Land Of Loss
Enter The Enchanter
Realm Of The Reaper
Discover The Destroyer
Harry Potter
Harry Potter
The Books
The Sorcerers Stone
The Chamber of Secrets
Pokemon
Links
Polls
My Adopted Pokemon
Win my Award
Gameshark Codes
Codes
Pokemon Codes
Downloads
Pokemon Downloads
Pokemon Battlers and stuff
Virtual Pokedex
Kewl Stuff
Adoption Center
Walkthrus
Pallet Town Walk Thru
Route1 To Mt Moon Walk Thru
Route4 to SS Anne Walk Thru
Lavander Town Walk Thru
Celedon City Walk Thru
Saffron City Walk Thru
Route14 To SafariZone Walkthru
Seafoam to Cinnabar Walkthru
Viridian Gym Walk Thru
Power Plant to Victory Road
The Elite Four
Mewtwo
Special Pokemon
Pokemon Map
Pokemon Battle Chart
Reviews
Donkey Kong 64
Jet Force Gemini
Starwars
Kewl Stuff
Starwars
Zelda
Codes
Zelda
More Zelda Stuff
Pics
Zelda Pic Gallery 1
Zelda Pic Gallery 2




Realm Of The Reaper


  NEW! Poetry and Doll Maker with Galleries!     [Learn About Our Ecommerce]
Graphics Gallery!

Things have gotten way beyond weird. First April, Jalil, David, and Christopher end up in Everworld. Since then, they've been hunted by trolls, entertained Vikings, fought in a war against Aztecs and their heart-eating god, encountered Merlin, met some strange alienlike metalsmiths, and got a chance to see their very first real, live dragon. It's been a strange few days, to say the least.
Their "journey" started out as a search for a friend, but things have turned dangerous. Because now April and the others are about to discover the true opposite of heaven - and it isn't a very nice place...


Sample Chapter From The Book

We marched down to the road. I loosened my sword in its scabbard. No way to know what we were walking into. But time was short.
"Anyone asks we're minstrels on our way to entertain the fairies," I said.

It was our basic cover story. We'd been a huge hit with the Vikings. Also in some nameless peasant hole in the deep forest. But Hel had not been amused. Maybe our luck would be better with the fairies.

We sauntered down looking as innocent as we could. At the same time we wanted to project a don't-mess-with-me look. It's a balancing act, Everworld is.

Part of me hoped for a fight. A fight I could win, anyway. Jalil had covered for me. Shown no expression when I lied to the others. But that left me being a fake.

"Sheep coming up the road," Jalil said. "Let's hurry."

"Why hurry?" Christopher asked.

"You want to walk in front of the sheep or behind the sheep?"

"Ah."

We stepped up the pace and joined the road about fifty feet ahead of the first sheep. About the same distance behind a big ox-cart loaded with what might be beets.

The road was hard-packed dirt and crushed shell. Like a country road down in the South. Grass faded at the edges. Intermittent knots of shade trees near the road offered temporary respite from the sun.

A stream, deep-cut and narrow winded alongside the road. Reeds and cattails covered the banks.

For a while all we saw were the sheep behind us and the back of the ox-cart ahead of us. And little enough of either of those. Jalil's hurry to avoid sheep crap had overlooked one vital fact: an awful lot of flocks had already moved along this road. We mostly kept our eyes down, looking to avoid the bigger piles. I was wearing the last pair of running shoes I'd ever find in Everworld. If they became unwearable it was lace-up boots if I was lucky.

Gradually we moved up on the wagonload of beets. But just as we were looking to pass, we ran into oncoming traffic. A file of dwarves, an even dozen of them carrying huge sacks on their backs. The loads would have crushed a human. The dwarves were sweating profusely and straining, but I heard no grumbling as they passed by.

It was my second view of dwarves. The first time had been in Hel's harem city. They were taciturn creatures. A hair taller than Idalia definitely, but built as broad as they were tall. They might have been carved out of live oak. Despite the heat and their burden each wore a chain mail shirt that went down to his knees and some sort of weapon: short sword, axe, nailed club.

The dwarves seemed to have no interest in us. We decided to show none in them. I had the feeling that dwarves liked to be left alone. I also had the feeling that if they weren't left alone the person who hassled them would be sorry.

We walked for another two hours keeping as quick a pace as we could manage. The peaches had helped but not much. We had about a two day food deficit. Water was plentiful but the food situation was becoming critical. I was thinking about dropping back to the beet wagon we'd passed and seeing if I could bargain for some. Had no idea what raw beets tasted like, or even if they could be eaten. But the hungrier I got the more openminded I became.

The countryside was becoming prettier all the time. It had been nice to begin with: rolling hills, bands of trees broken up by flower-filled meadows. But now it was going beyond anything nature could manage unaided. We were walking through land that was more and more like a tended garden.

A low stone wall now lined the road on both sides. The shade trees lined up on both sides of the road, spaced far enough apart to allow for lush hydrangia hedges, orange day lilies, rose bushes bearing fat, full roses in white, pink and red.

The grass was trimmed, edged, and as green and fresh as a golf course.

"Hey, I think my grandfather lives here," Christopher said. "This is exactly like his country club down in Florida. Less humid here. Not as many people driving with the turn signal on."

The only thing that marred the trimmed, artificial perfection was the sight of the satyr's legs bounding along.

"Man, what is going on with that?" Christopher wondered.

"It must feel some affinity for us. Maybe some inchoate attraction," Jalil suggested.

"It has no eyes," April pointed out. "How does it follow us? I mean, it has no head. No nothing."

"You know, I think on the scale of mysteries, how it follows us is maybe less mysterious than the mere fact that it can move at all," Jalil pointed out.

"Jalil you talk so purty when you want to," Christopher said. "When you do that I feel an inchoate attraction for you."

The road turned around a willow so huge it seemed to be a small grove rather than a single tree. The road turned and we found ourselves looking at a gate.

It was very pretty. An arch formed out of rose bushes rose very high over the road. It would be just high enough for the beet wagon to squeeze under when it caught up to us. The arch was anchored on either side of the road by a stout stone wall. The wall extended maybe a hundred feet to left and right and ended in a round stone tower two dozen feet tall, give or take. More roses adorned the top of the wall.

"That's pretty with all the roses," April said. "Kind of looks like what you'd expect the entrance to Fairy Land to be, huh?"

"It's not about the roses," I said. "It's about the thorns. Try going over that wall it'd be like barbed wire. And see on either side, out past the towers, more bushes of different types. I'm betting on more thorns. See the way the ground rises sharply? Someone wants to avoid this gate they're going up a steep hill into dense thorn bushes and with that tower looking down at them the whole time."

We approached the gate cautiously, but without looking guilty or like we were worried. Senna's warning about little people who survived in a land of giants was fresh in my memory. And if I had forgotten it this beautiful-yet-serious gate would have reminded me.

A small person lounged beside the gate, tipped back on a chair. He was smoking a long pipe. He wore a bright red cap, a bright green tunic and soft shoes that ended in curled, pointed toes.

He was approximately the same size as a dwarf but built in more nearly human proportions. His legs were perhaps a bit short for his body, but other than that he could have been a seven-year old with an old man's wrinkled, good-natured face.

As he spotted us he lifted his cap in greeting. Smiled around his pipe. Winked a blue eye.

"It's like right out of a fairy story," April marveled. "My great-grandmother, may she rest in peace, she was from Ireland, she'd tell stories about the leprechauns. They were just like that! Exactly. It's exactly the image I had in my mind from when I was little."

"Top 'o the afternoon to ye, then, good folk," the leprechaun said. "And ladies, sure your loveliness pales the most beautiful rose on the bush. It does, it does, an' no mistake."

"Hello," I said. "We're looking for Fairy Land. I guess we're there, huh?" It was hard to feel very worried under the circumstances.

"You've found it, then, so ye have. Aye, you've found us out. How is it we can help you, good sir?"

"Well, we're traveling minstrels. We're looking to find a place to put on a show."

The leprechaun smiled. "Minstrels are ye? Ah, then that's something, eh? Minstrels. Have you happened to notice as you walked along the road, I say have you happened to notice that from time to time you came upon, perhaps even stepped in, a steaming great pile of manure?"

I nodded, grinning, couldn't help myself. He was cute. And I don't use the word cute.

"Did you notice that, then?" The leprechaun grinned right back at me. Suddenly the smile evaporated. "Then you know what I think of your story of being minstrels. It's a steaming great pile of manure."



Sample Chapter From The Book

"Get up, something's happening," David hissed.
I opened my eyes. April was moving beside me. Rolling away from me. I felt lingering warmth - and numbness - where her elbow had crossed my left arm.

"What is it?" I asked. Was this another dream? No. No. I'd woken up, finally. I had been conscious, over there.

And now I was here again. Conscious.

The room was dark. Still night. And I sensed it was not very late, that I had not been asleep for very long.

I heard a raucous, feminine voice, from outside. Far off, but loud enough to be heard. I got up. Christopher was just wiping the sleep from his eyes and complaining.

April said, "What's going on?"

"Don't know," David said. "Listen."

We strained to hear. Looking at each other or at nothing and listening.

The raucous voice cried out, "Who shall it be, oh, who shall it be, that serves the needs of the Terror Queen?"

And then the voice laughed, wonderfully amused by her own little ditty.

"Open the shutters," I said. I went to them and pushed them open, cautiously. I peeked through the crack. The moon was up. A faint, unclean glow illuminated the rock face of the mountain. The cave was a pit of black. Something moving in front of it. Coming out of it, or passing in front of it, impossible to tell. Impossible to tell much except that it was too large to be human.

"What now?" Christopher said, exasperated.

"She's coming this way," April said. "Going to cross the bridge."

"You sure it's a 'she?'" I asked. "All the eunuchs around here-"

"It's a 'she,'" April said positively. "Anyway, she called herself the Terror Queen."

"Could be a big, mean transvestite," Christopher said. "Of course here she'd have to be a big, mean transvestite Loch Ness monster to really stand out in a crowd around here."

Again the big voice chortled. "Ah, they welcome me. Do you want me so badly then, that you play coy? Three is it? And the useless fourth?"

I had the odd feeling she was talking to us. Couldn't be. She couldn't see us from so far away, through a dark window.

The Queen, or whatever she was, went temporarily out of sight beneath the line of the walls.

From the streets outside there came noises. Men's voices. Scared.

"She's coming this way!"

"You fool, don't cry out!"

Scuffling sounds. Fighting. Cries of anger, fear.

The door burst in. It was the red-faced man who'd called himself a warrior of the Fianna. With him was the old woman who'd served our food.

"You damned fools!" The man rushed for the window and slammed it shut. "Why not just call out to Her, you silly twits? You've drawn her to this house."

"What is this?" David demanded.

"My house to be all torn apart," the crone cried, wringing her arthritic fingers.

"Hide yourselves, if you can," the Fiannan said. He shot a look at April. "And for all love keep the girl from her. She's a beauty, and hell will brook no competition."

He slammed from the room, yelling, "Run, everyone out, the bloody fools have drawn her here!" The crone went with him, still moaning about her house.

"I didn't think pagans believed in hell," April said. "But anything they call hell has got to be bad enough. Let's get out of here."

"Got that right," Christopher said.

We piled out of the room. David ran, buckling on his sword as he went. We clattered down the stairs. Rushed through the dining room.

Into the street. No one in sight but a brief glimpse of two men disappearing around the corner.

"Follow them," David said, and off we went.

It was dark in the narrow streets. The moonlight didn't reach down this far. The cobblestones were uneven. We tripped. Reached a corner and could not even tell how many streets led away from it, or in what directions.

"Ow. Watch it. Here, there's a low wall or something."

"Okay, this way. There's a street."

We started moving again, but slowly. Keeping in touch by staying huddled together.

"It's lighter up ahead," I said.

"Yeah. Let's go that way."

We trotted, hand in hand, hand on belt. David had been carrying his sword at the ready but he sheathed it, now. Too much danger of an accident.

Ahead, silvery moonlight turned buildings gray like an old black and white photograph. We emerged from the narrow street into a more open place, a sort of trapezoidal public square. There was even a fountain in the middle. It dribbled water from the mouths of stylized lions.

And then, a noise, behind us. From the very street we'd just left, I spun around and saw her.

She glowed in the moonlight. But also from some deeper, inner light. She was huge, of course, maybe twice the height of a man, but beautiful beyond any beauty I'd ever imagined.

I saw her only in profile. A lustrous green eye. Cascading black hair. Skin so pale and translucent she might have been formed of the early morning sunlight. She was perfectly-formed in every aspect. A long leg, bared by the slit in her flimsy, breeze-tossed, barely-seen dress. A firm, inviting breast. Taut, smooth flesh. Perfect, down to the shape of her ear, the fingers of her hand.

I could not look away. I knew in some rational part of my mind that no one woman could ever be perfect, that it was absurd to talk of perfect beauty when there are a million different beauties. I knew my reaction was distorted. That some spell . . .

And yet, I found myself walking toward her, unable to do otherwise. So beautiful.

"Ah, there you are," she said. "Do you find me beautiful? Do you lust for me? I will test your ardor."

She turned to face me.

I screamed.


Click on Marill To mail me

Domain Lookup
         www..
Get www.yourdomainofchoice.com for your site with services!




.

 
Any WordAll WordsExact Phrase
This SiteAll Sites
Visitors: 00551
Page Updated Tue Jan 18, 2000 12:10pm EST