Beneath The Hunter’s Shadow (The Realm of War & Whispers #1) Read Online Donna Fletcher

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Paranormal Tags Authors: Series: The Realm of War & Whispers Series by Donna Fletcher
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Total pages in book: 109
Estimated words: 103333 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 517(@200wpm)___ 413(@250wpm)___ 344(@300wpm)
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Maelis’s grip on Elara’s arm tightened. “You must hide.”

Elara looked at her, startled. “Hide?”

“Into the woods. Now.”

Elara shook her head. “I am not a healer⁠—”

“They won’t believe you,” Maelis snapped, her voice sharp though low. “Your hair, your eyes… they’ll see you as the one they seek before you draw breath to deny it.”

“They won’t find me guilty of a gift I don’t possess.”

“You think that will matter?” Maelis hissed. “Hunters have no need of truth. They take what they’re told to take. You’re marked whether you wish it or not.”

The drums began again.

This time closer.

The sound rolled over the hills, deep and relentless, setting the very air to trembling.

Maelis shoved Elara toward the forest path. “Go, lass, and stay off the main roads, take the old trails less traveled and be wary of strangers. Go now. Go and warn the other villages that the Hunters’ drums sound strong. They come for the healers.”

Elara turned, her cloak flaring in the wind. “What about you?”

Maelis’s gaze softened, though her voice did not. “I’m too old for their chains to matter. But you? You still have roads before you. Run, Elara.”

The beat of the drums quickened, echoing through the valley.

Elara hesitated only a heartbeat more before gathering her skirts and running, the drums’ steady, powerful beat growing stronger.

The mist closed around her, cool and damp against her skin, the drums chasing her frantic heartbeat into the trees. Brambles tore at her skirt, and the scent of moss and rain-wet bark filled her lungs. She didn’t stop until the sounds of the village faded to a distant murmur, replaced by the drip of water from the leaves and the whisper of wind through the pines.

She pressed herself against the trunk of an old oak, breath ragged.

Calm.

She needed to calm herself or she would not be able to hear the forest alive around her, listening, waiting to help her.

The drums’ intense pounding rolled through the trees like distant thunder and though she would have preferred to press her hands against her ears and silence it, she didn’t. She had to listen. Had to hear. She crouched low among the ferns, pressing herself into the shadow of the oak.

Through the trees she could see the edge of the village, blurred some by distance. Figures moved there now, dark shapes on horseback, cloaks trailing like wings, the glint of steel catching the weak morning light.

The Hunters had arrived.

The drums ceased.

For a heartbeat, all was still. The villagers held their breath, their eyes fixed on the narrow road that cut around the fields. Even the wind seemed to wait. Then came the thud of hooves.

Out of the thinning mist rode a line of black-cloaked figures, the Hunters of Venngraith. There were twelve in all, their mounts broad-chested and restless, the sound of their approach heavy as storm surf against rock. Armor gleamed beneath their cloaks, silver worked into dark leather.

No one moved to greet them.

The lead rider dismounted, his face shadowed beneath his hood. When he pushed it back, the villagers saw a man whose expression was carved of stone; cold eyes, a scar down his cheek, a firm mouth made for orders, not mercy.

“We seek the healer,” he said. His voice carried easily, calm and unhurried. “The one who conquers death.”

A murmur rippled through the crowd. No one answered.

The Hunter’s gaze swept the gathering, slow and searching. “The king commands her brought to Caerith, home of the king. Those who aid us will be rewarded. Those who hinder us…” His eyes settled on a young man near the front. “Step forward.”

The man hesitated, then obeyed.

“Your name?”

“Donnel, sir.”

“Your wife?”

Donnel’s eyes darted to where a woman clutched his arm. “Lysa.”

The Hunter studied her plump and pale face, then turned away as if dismissing her entirely. “We will begin with the healers. Bring them.”

Another Hunter urged his horse forward. Two villagers, both older women, were dragged from the edge of the crowd, their protests swallowed by the sound of hoofbeats and muffled cries. One dropped her bundle of herbs, the scent of crushed rosemary spilling into the cold air.

Maelis stepped forward before anyone could stop her. “No healer with such power exists,” she said, her voice firm despite the tremor beneath it. “She is nothing more than a myth. You waste your time.”

The lead Hunter looked at her for a long moment. “Your name.”

“Maelis.”

“You will come with us.”

A soldier swung down from his horse and grabbed her arm roughly. She struggled, striking him with surprising strength for her years, but another caught her from behind.

“Stop!” someone cried, the Hunters ignoring the plea.

“You’ll find nothing in this village!” Maelis shouted as they pulled her toward the road. “Only fear and honest folk!”

“Fear is what serves us best,” the Hunter said.

More women were taken, two young, one middle-aged, each seized from the crowd as the Hunters moved through like a dark tide. The sound of weeping rose, and the scent of churned earth and sweat hung thick in the air.


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