Genre Fantasy. Page - 119
Olivia thinks that being normal is wonderful just because of the fact she never lived as anything else. But when a strange burning sensation, a man showing up in her room and a suprise trip to a Florida summer camp she realizes normal isn't fun. In between discovering her powers, new romances and a whole new life, a war is brewing, and she is the center of it all.
For the past several months, Shayla has been rotting in a hellish prison, known and feared as the Fortress Vikquara. After managing to escape, a feat deemed impossible until now, she suddenly finds herself trapped in the last place she expected. Did she escape one master only to fall into the hands of another? With the memories of her imprisonment still haunting her, will she manage to retain her freedom? Or will fate leave her trembling under the imprisonment of the man she fears the most?
Where Witches roam and Demon's spawn....
there is always more to a story than what the eyes can see...
underneath each layer of skin...
is the soul that begs to fly to the moon and back...
behind every closed door, and cold empty room...
lies the spirit of an Angel downcast from the heaven's above...
waiting to be woken by it's souls abated breath...
in the heart of a man or woman strong enough to waken a sleeping Rogue...
A long time ago the first intelligent beings were born her their mother cat goddess, Flixy.These people founded the country of Altrilia.Now the aftershocks of the revolutionary war force it's only heir to the throne to hide away from the world.This person is the last of the Altrilian Royal Bloods; Princess Felina
At long last, fans of T.M. Camp's "Assam & Darjeeling" can read the next chapter in the story of everyone's favorite little girl lost, Jee.
(And if you haven't read "Assam & Darjeeling" yet, then be advised: Here there be spoilers.)
At the close of "Assam & Darjeeling" readers were given a brief glimpse of Jee as she approached the Winter Palace. But the path that leads her there is long and twisted, with many other stories to tell along the way. "The Cradle" is the first of these.
Jee is enjoying the new freedom that comes with being an exile from the land of the living. But she soon discovers that freedom has its share of discomforts and dangers. Caught in a torrential downpour, she is taken in by a kindly old couple who, it turns out, have story of their own to tell. And Jee discovers yet again that things in the Underworld are not always what they seem.
"The Cradle" begins a new cycle of stories about a little girl looking for a place that she can, at last, call home.