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Beneath Ceaseless Skies - Do Not Look Back, My Lion by Alix E. Harrow
Beneath Ceaseless Skies - Do Not Look Back, My Lion by Alix E. Harrow
Eefa looks back. Talaan is bed-tousled and half-dressed astride a yellow mare, her hair a tangled mane behind her (how many times has Eefa combed that hair, gently, in the glow of the fire?), her robe fallen open to the chest (the laundry Eefa washed the previous day, folded with lavender and cloves). Her feet are bare. She does not seem to feel the white-toothed wind nipping at her flesh.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies - Do Not Look Back, My Lion by Alix E. Harrow
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Black, Like Earth by Jordyn Blanson
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Black, Like Earth by Jordyn Blanson
I want to argue with the homeowner, but I know it will get me nowhere. Instead I close my fist around the hard stones he gave me and walk away. ‘Be thankful the ingrates paid at all,’ Aksá would say. Usha always underpaid us. Aksá said I would get used to it, but I have been working two summers now and still I am angry. I have been working two summers now and I am more angry than ever.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Black, Like Earth by Jordyn Blanson
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Faêl by Tobi Ogundiran
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Faêl by Tobi Ogundiran
Sùr knelt and lifted her out of the coffin, feeling the pain lance through his spine as he looked down at his wife. She was stiff, a statue of hard crystalline salt, frozen in the position she had been when she died. Her eyes that had been gold in life were white and unblinking and unseeing in death. But her lips were curled in a smile. A true smile, not the grimace they were forced to wear to keep the pain at bay. In the moment of her death, finally, finally, she had known true peace.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Faêl by Tobi Ogundiran
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Gert of the Hundred by L.S. Johnson
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Gert of the Hundred by L.S. Johnson
More clawed paws swam before her, jutting from his shirtsleeves, and when they laid themselves on her face they were cold and wet like the corpses had been, everything cold and wet and smelling of death. She raised her eyes and stared into the swollen black ones bulging from the boy’s face. Daughter, you’ve returned at last, he repeated in a mouth stuffed with chelicerae, his face glowing with moonlight. Sooner or later, we all come back.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Gert of the Hundred by L.S. Johnson
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | A Marble for the Drowning River by Ann Chatham
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | A Marble for the Drowning River by Ann Chatham
I held out my hand with the marble in it, and the drowned girl reached out her long fingers and lifted it gently out of my palm, not even touching me with one of her fingernails. She rolled it in her hand for a moment, looking into the misty shadows in the glass, and then swallowed it, grinning almost like she was still human.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | A Marble for the Drowning River by Ann Chatham
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Bread and Circuses by Genevieve Valentine
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Bread and Circuses by Genevieve Valentine
Why an armed man should have been the one worrying, she never explained, but I had seen the tumblers tossing one another in the air and the strongman lifting all six dancing girls on his outstretched arms like they were no heavier than a pair of sleeves. I could guess what would happen to anyone who was caught out.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Bread and Circuses by Genevieve Valentine
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Shatterach Gates by Paul Daly
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Shatterach Gates by Paul Daly
The warmth, then swift coldness, of piss on my legs brings me back from the rolling horror oozing over the dirt-pack towards me. Still a league distant, it is monstrous. A grotesque boil on the earth; a seething mass of tree spars and rocks that scalds the ice around it into steam. The way it moves! Questing forward, then rushing into the blackened space before it. Each thrust accompanied by boulders grinding, great snappings of century-old trunks as it heaves ahead.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Shatterach Gates by Paul Daly
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | To Go Home to Leal by Susan Forest
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | To Go Home to Leal by Susan Forest
The pronouncements of the captain were drowned by the goading of the crowd, but his actions were clear. It took three men to hold Kaul's father's left arm on the block. One soldier brought out a broad-bladed axe and his father's struggles renewed. The axe-man bent over him, giving instructions, but Kaul's father's eyes rolled and he screamed. The axe-man seemed to shrug; then, raising his weapon, he brought it down, once, with a sickening crunch.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | To Go Home to Leal by Susan Forest
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Marvelous Inventions of Mr. Tock by Daniel Baker
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Marvelous Inventions of Mr. Tock by Daniel Baker
Beneath the shop, Latch had to fight his way through a forest of dangling limbs. Hundreds of wooden arms and legs hung from the ceiling, fingers and toes low enough to brush Latch’s face as he pried his way through like some jungle explorer, all reaching out, grasping for him.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Marvelous Inventions of Mr. Tock by Daniel Baker
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Masks of the Mud God by Greg Kurzawa
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Masks of the Mud God by Greg Kurzawa
"No," Miriam said. But there had been pain. There had been terrible pain. She had bit down on a twisted sheet as her insides knotted, as the thing in her lurched and fought to live, flexing in the throes of their shared agony. It had gone on far too long, and she remembered thinking that either it must die soon, or she would.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Masks of the Mud God by Greg Kurzawa
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Proteus Lost by Tony Pi
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Proteus Lost by Tony Pi
"Antlion's mirror-writing. He was Leonardo da Vinci when he wrote this book, and favoured writing that way because he was left-handed. It made less of a smudge and also serves as a deterrent to others who cannot easily read the words in reverse. They are needed for navigating the many paths through the Codex. The first protean seal is like the entrance to the maze."
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Proteus Lost by Tony Pi
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Requiem for the Unchained by Cae Hawksmoor
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Requiem for the Unchained by Cae Hawksmoor
I swear that I hear it when the Star deploys her new lanterns. I feel it as a low vibration in all the mineral parts of my body and look out of the starboard window just in time to see the six cold iron cages slide out of her. They ignite one at a time, turning the faceless ether of the ghostmurk into a haze of green light. It's so bright that I have to turn my head. Raise my hand to shield my eyes. Can almost feel my own shadow burning into me.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Requiem for the Unchained by Cae Hawksmoor
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Wooden Boxes Lined with the Tongues of Doves by Claire Humphrey
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Wooden Boxes Lined with the Tongues of Doves by Claire Humphrey
We dry the tongues on butcher's paper beside the stove. Once desiccated, they barely have a scent. Uncle Sholert has shown me how to arrange them like tiny shingles or scales, overlapping. We fix them in place with a glue made from horses' hooves, and then we seal the boxes with beeswax.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Wooden Boxes Lined with the Tongues of Doves by Claire Humphrey
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Think Of Winter by Eleanna Castroianni
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Think Of Winter by Eleanna Castroianni
Folu has forgotten how to read them, but something is stirring. The symbols start dancing again, even if only a little. The Lion, the Knight, the Sun. The Knight is finally here. The cards knew he was coming. He came to ruin everything, with his warm blanket and bright fire and hot soup. The Knight has brought the Sun. The Sun burns. The Grey Men’s Sun burnt Mother. Folu will never forget.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Think Of Winter by Eleanna Castroianni
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | When We Go by Evan Dicken
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | When We Go by Evan Dicken
"At the end, where else?" Streamers of greasy black smoke leaked from her cloak to vanish in the wind, her body like dry grass in my arms. I shook her, but she, the god of the dead, was dead herself and my hands empty but for her cloak of feathers.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | When We Go by Evan Dicken
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Across the Bough Bridge by Mackenzie Kincaid
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Across the Bough Bridge by Mackenzie Kincaid
She kept her head up until she'd exited the shop. Then she staggered sideways into the wall outside. The pair of marbles glinted in the palm of her good hand. She was a little stunned to be holding her prize at all; she stared at them as if somewhere in their milky depths the secrets of the universe might reside. Perhaps it was merely the dizzying pain, but she felt almost as if they stared back.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Across the Bough Bridge by Mackenzie Kincaid
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | What the River Brings, and What It Takes Away by Natalia Theodoridou
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | What the River Brings, and What It Takes Away by Natalia Theodoridou
It was only months after she'd moved to the cabin, months of teeth cracking on stone, that she thought the witch may have meant her harm. Not a conspiracy between women, one free thanks to age, the other free thanks to cunning and constitution, but a punishment intended to ruin her. And yet Sapo kept at it, kept eating the mountain, stone by stone by stone, because she feared that if she didn't, it would come, and she didn't want it.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | What the River Brings, and What It Takes Away by Natalia Theodoridou
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Wind Shall Blow by Gregory Norman Bossert
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Wind Shall Blow by Gregory Norman Bossert
She sang those lines with a fierce, forlorn glee. The ballads took her that way, wherever they would, be they sad or glad. It was that blinding, unearthly intensity in her singing, her ability to sway thoughts and glances, that was the reason the townfolk looked sideways and crossed themselves or made the old warding signs. Part of the reason.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Wind Shall Blow by Gregory Norman Bossert
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | A Courtship of Beasts by Michael Anthony Ashley
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | A Courtship of Beasts by Michael Anthony Ashley
The fire inside Shams was turning, filling him with a bursting hot hunger, and he would have gulped down every leaf and every tree, the stones and earth, the home and the hill and world for his want of her. “Stay,” he said, and the low branches blackened and curled by his breath. “Stay. Stay. Stay.” She sat with him, sweating but unmoved, and she let him hold her and she let him kiss her, and no more. His hunger remained inside.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | A Courtship of Beasts by Michael Anthony Ashley
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Thirty-Eight-Hundred Bone Coat by R.K. Duncan
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Thirty-Eight-Hundred Bone Coat by R.K. Duncan
The river fought like a snake that could smell the sweetness in his blood. It wrapped thick coils hawser-tight around him and tried to throw him down the current. He twisted, slipped through and beat up into light bright as the sun over his head. He had it. Three fingertips above the silt, the hand still whole and safe below.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Thirty-Eight-Hundred Bone Coat by R.K. Duncan
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Book of How to Live by Rose Lemberg
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Book of How to Live by Rose Lemberg
Zilpit-nai-Rinah hit steel against tinder, harder than she’d intended. Her lantern, unreliable and imperfect though it was, would provide enough light for her purpose. She pulled out a pen, her own clever mechanical design that allowed ink to be stored in a small cartridge equipped with a pumping mechanism. She’d used her jeweler’s tools to construct it—more useful than jewelry perhaps, though she had no intention of selling it at market.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Book of How to Live by Rose Lemberg
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Boy Who Would Not Be Enchanted by A.M. Dellamonica
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Boy Who Would Not Be Enchanted by A.M. Dellamonica
Too late, of course. They pried my mouth open. The old lady spooned a morsel of something—barley, I think—into my mouth. When I spat it back at them, they caught the pieces on a piece of bamboo cut into a jigsaw puzzle piece. This they gave to a spellscribe, who wrote my full name at the top in grass-green ink.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | The Boy Who Would Not Be Enchanted by A.M. Dellamonica
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Hangdog by Dayna K. Smith
Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Hangdog by Dayna K. Smith
They found him dangling from what was left of a tough old willow. Grinn’s nose couldn’t have missed him, the clean den-smell of hidden wolf beneath the bitter futility billowing from him like wet-leaf smoke. She eased along the dry creek bed from behind. Her choices displeased the palomino, but she could take this other wolf if it came to claws. He was a long fellow, sure, broad-shouldered with shaggy brown hair, but Grinn’s height and heft near matched him.
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies | Hangdog by Dayna K. Smith