DemonWars Saga Volume 1

Read DemonWars Saga Volume 1 Online

Authors: R. A. Salvatore

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Collections & Anthologies, #Dark Fantasy, #Fiction / Fantasy / General, #Science Fiction/Fantasy

BOOK: DemonWars Saga Volume 1
8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
The DemonWars Saga: Volume 1
 is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living, dead, or weretiger, is entirely coincidental.
2014 Del Rey eBook Edition
The Demon Awakens
 copyright © 1997 by R. A. Salvatore
The Demon Spirit
 copyright © 1998 by R. A. Salvatore
The Demon Apostle
 copyright © 1999 by R. A. Salvatore
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Del Rey, an imprint of Random House, a division of Random House LLC, a Penguin Random House Company, New York.
D
EL
 R
EY
 and the H
OUSE
 colophon are registered trademarks of Random House LLC.
The Demon Awakens, The Demon Spirit
, and 
The Demon Apostle
 were published in hardcover in 1997, 1998, and 1999, respectively, by Del Rey, an imprint of Random House, a division of Random House LLC.
eBook ISBN 978-0-345-54996-9
Map by Laura Maestro
Cover art: Daryl Mandryk
Cover design: Scott Biel
v3.1
Contents

The Demon Awakens
  

To Owen Lock, for having faith in me and reminding me to have faith in myself
.
To Veronica Chapman, for her open mind and sharp eye
.
To Kuo-yu Liang—energy is infectious
.
And to one other, privately, who found me in a dark place at a dark time, and lit a candle
.
And, of cours
e, as with everything I do, to Diane and the kids
.
Contents
Prelude
The Demon Dactyl came awake. It didn’t seem such a momentous thing, just a gradual stirring in a deep cave in a far, empty mountain. An unnoticed event, seen by none save the cave worms and those few insomniacs among the bevy of weary bats hanging from the high ceiling.
But the demon spirit had awakened, had come back from its long dormancy into the statuelike form it had left behind after its last visit to the world called Corona. The tangible, corporeal body felt good to the wandering spirit. The dactyl could feel its blood, hot blood, coursing through its wings and mighty legs, could feel the twitching of its mighty muscles. Its eyes flickered open but saw only blackness, for the form, left standing in magical stasis in the deep cave, head bowed and wings wrapped tightly about its torso, had been covered by magma. Most of the fiery stuff of that time long past had bubbled and flowed away from the cavern, but enough had remained to harden about the dactyl’s corporeal form. The spirit had come back to Corona encased in obsidian!
The demon spirit fell deep within itself, summoned its powers, both physical and magical. By sheer will and brute strength, the dactyl flexed its wings. A thin crack ran down the center of the obsidian sarcophagus. The dactyl flexed again and the crack widened, and then, with a sudden powerful burst, the beast blew apart the obsidian, stretched its great wings out to the side, clawed tips grasping and rending the air. The dactyl threw back its head and opened wide its mouth, screeching for the sheer joy of the return, for the thoughts of the chaos it would bring again to the quiet human kingdoms of Corona.
Its torso resembled that of a tall, slender man, shaped and lined by corded strands of taut muscle and sporting a pair of tremendous batlike wings, twenty feet across when fully extended and with strength enough to lift a full-grown bull in swift flight. Its head, too, was somewhat human, except more angular, with a narrow jaw and pointed chin. The dactyl’s ears were pointed as well, poking up about the demon creature’s thin tuft of black hair. Neither did that hair hide the creature’s horns, thumb sized and curling in toward each other at the top of the demon’s brow.
The texture of its skin was rough and thick, an armored hide, reddish in hue and shiny, as if lit by its own inner glow. Shining, too, were the demon’s eyes, pools of liquid black at most times, but shifting to fiery red orbs, living flames, when the demon was agitated, a glow of absolute hatred.
The creature flexed and stretched, extended its wings to their full glory, reached and clawed at the air with its humanlike arms. The demon extended its fingernails, transformed them into hooked claws, and grew its teeth—two pointed canines extending down over its bottom lip. Every part of the demon was a weapon, devastating and deadly. And undeniably powerful though this monster appeared, this demon’s real strength lay in its mind and its purpose, the tempter of souls, the twister of hearts, the maker of lies. Theologians of Corona argued over whether the demon dactyl was the source or the result of evil. Did the dactyl bring the weakness, the immorality, to humanity? Was the dactyl the source of the deadly sins, or did it manifest itself and walk the world when those sins had festered to the point of eruption?

Other books

When the Heart Lies by North, Christina
Game by Walter Dean Myers
Fashionably Dead in Diapers by Robyn Peterman
A Whole New Light by Julia Devlin
Cherry Bomb by Leigh Wilder
Deep Lie by Stuart Woods
Highland Seer by Willa Blair