Date: Mon, 12 Sep 2016 05:37:11 -0500
From: Kody Boye <boyekody@gmail.com>
Subject: His Touch of Ice - Part 57

DISCLAIMER:

This is a work of fiction, and contains scenes of graphic violence and
explicit male/male sex. If you are not of the legal age to read this, or
are uncomfortable with this sort of content, please turn back now.

HIS TOUCH OF ICE (The Ice Men, Book 1) is copyright © Kody Boye. All
Rights are reserved.

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I dreamed I was standing in the middle of an open field.

I was a child, here. Seven years old, short and with long mangy hair,
stubborn about my need to wear prescription glasses but forced to use them
because of the headaches I'd otherwise endure—at that age, I was the
trademark of what you would call an all-American boy. I played baseball, I
did well in school, attended church regularly. I was rarely prone to bad
habits, but the one thing that always got me in trouble was the one thing
that could kill me.

Thunderstorms.

One rolled across the winding outskirts of east Texas in a great fog of
white. So smoky that the clouds resembled nothing of their usual selves and
instead looked like marshmellows finely melted over a brimming fire, it
ebbed and contracted as the wind carried it across the state with a casual
malevolence only found in nature. Such storms had always fascinated
me. Previous viewings in other states did little in comparison I found to
the awesome spectacles that took place in Texas. As such, I had wandered
away from home—across the street to the field where, during the summer
months, I played baseball with my little league team.

My parents had no idea where I was.

Mom was making dinner.

Dad had yet to come home from work.

I'd been given the perfect opportunity to sneak away.

The first flashes of lightning were like startled insects freed from their
inconspicuous homes—one here, one there. They rarely spiderwebbed and
only occasionally produced thunder—which, even in its infancy, sounded
like great belches from the Gods. I struggled to maintain my position,
keeping away from the trees that blanketed the outer sides of the park.

There was one thing I'd always been told—even as a child, when I could
just barely walk: When you're out in a thunderstorm—

Stay away from trees.

The monumental moment in which I would be struck came as no surprise to
someone who suffered reoccurring nightmares. There was no reason in the way
it happened. Lightning can't strike twice. It rarely strikes in open
fields. But when it does, it rarely strikes anything in them.

That day, I just so happened to be that mathematically-impossible thing
that happened.

It hit me—hard, right on the top of my head. Supercharging the hairs on
my skin, sending my hair straight on end, my body reeling from an electric
shock so immense that it would knock me out for hours on end.

Unlike my regular dreams, I wasn't viewing myself from the outside—I was
actually in my body.

I didn't feel the impact. I didn't experience the pain, the confusion, the
outright terror as my mind struggled to process the situation. Instead, I
looked directly into the face of the beast and waited for my answer.

Something materialized before me.

The flowing skirt of snow, the immense obsidian eyes—

The flash cleared and with it the memory of my past. In its place came the
Kelda—who, hovering in midair, descended toward me with a grace
incapable of any living thing.  Jason, she said.

I couldn't speak. Shock might've played a big factor in that, as well as my
dream-like state, but I understood everything.

A great wrong has been committed in the grand scheme of things, she
continued, her countenance not faltering once as she lowered to just a foot
above the ground. Kaldr Winters has faltered. They have usurped the
destined ruler. A traitor in our midst. Guy Winters has been taken.

"What?" I asked.

The breath parting from my lips whispered before me in a low white hue,
disappearing moments afterward as the storm raged on above. The Kelda's
face remained unmoving—stone-like even in her eyes. Her thin,
nearly-invisible lips parted, paused, then parted again before she said, I
do not know the answers to the questions you speak. I hear them, child, in
my head, my heart—but my passion calls me to my child. He has not been
taken by a man of mortal flesh. Those who bay within the night have sought
to call him Justice.

Lightning flashed. The rustle of leaves, followed by the downpour of them
past her figure, shrouded the Kelda's form.

Her mouth opened in silent admission of surprise.

My guts strangled themselves.

"Where is he?" I asked, stepping forward, breaking free of what I imagined
must have been some supernatural hold. "Where is he, Kelda? Tell me where
he is."

It is a trap. They wish to lure you into their den.

"I don't care! I can't leave him to die!"

I hear truly the matter of your heart, dear Jason DePella, Warm Flesh and
Bóndi of Kaldr Prince Guy Anthony Winters. I speak only one thing: The
dogs live underground. They will not be hard to find.

The sky opened to let forth peals of rain, which struck the Kelda and
surrounded her porcelain skin with globules of ice that resembled
hailstones. She looked briefly to those pooling before her, then lifted her
head to train her eyes on me.

She said nothing.

I only faltered.

Such a pull was indicative of a dream-like state.

I was waking up.

And when I did, I knew what I would do.
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If you enjoyed this installment of HIS TOUCH OF ICE, consider emailing the
author with your thoughts or donating to him via Paypal at
boyekody@gmail.com. You can also download the novel for free on Smashwords,
Amazon Kindle, or any other major eBook retailer, or buy the Audible
version online via Amazon.com. You can visit the author online at
www.kodyboye.com.