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The Harbinger: Portents of Death, #1
The Harbinger: Portents of Death, #1
The Harbinger: Portents of Death, #1
Ebook147 pages1 hourPortents of Death

The Harbinger: Portents of Death, #1

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Can a death omen reject her destiny and have a normal life?

Ravyn Corvus only wants to experience what every other young woman her age does. Receiving a scholarship to a college on the other side of the country from her family, she can't get away fast enough. She has a secret though. One that many would consider deadly—and unpredictable. Her mother calls it a curse from the gods.

Daniel O'Connor is enjoying the college life. When a beautiful freshman catches his eye, he hopes to win her over—but she keeps pushing him away. Mysterious events around the campus bring them closer together, but will they be able to deny the attraction between them when they become enmeshed in multiple tragedies?

Meanwhile, an ancient evil has returned, revealing secrets that neither of them would have ever believed. Everything they thought they knew about themselves and their families threatens to destroy them…or unite them.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherRebekah Lewis
Release dateDec 18, 2023
ISBN9798223099185
The Harbinger: Portents of Death, #1
Author

Rebekah Lewis

Rebekah Lewis siempre se ha sentido atraída por los mundos de ficción. Como lectora ávida y amante del cine, era solo cuestión de tiempo que empezara a escribir sus propias historias y a dejarse llevar por su imaginación. La serie más popular de Rebekah, Los Sátiros Malditos, está basada en la mitología griega y pertenece al género paranormal romántico. También escribe sobre los géneros de fantasía y viajes en el tiempo. Cuando los sátiros, conejos blancos o héroes testarudos no ocupan todo su tiempo, emplea su talento creativo como una galardonada ilustradora de portadas. Rebekah es licenciada en Literatura Inglesa y vive en Savannah (Georgia) con su gato Bagheera. www.Rebekah-Lewis.com

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    The Harbinger - Rebekah Lewis

    Prologue

    Thessaly, Greece, 687 B.C.

    Nobody created a curse like an Olympian. Apollo, the god of music and sun, prophecy and truth, was especially good at it. He was as wrathful as he was beautiful. As quick to kill as he was to fall into infatuation. Those he loved rarely lived long lives, and those who did, regretted it. Ask Daphne, forever bound to the laurel tree for refusing to return his love. Ask the princess of Thessaly, fair Coronis, for her time was surely at its end.

    Here, hidden in the trees beyond the city, Artemis wiped a tear as she nocked her bow and took aim at the mortal man, Ischys, now a prince by marriage. She closed her eyes and let fly her arrow. She didn’t have to look to know it struck true—straight to the heart. Coronis screamed as her new husband dropped to his knees before her, sputtering his last breaths. Dead for merely loving another. Dead because her brother couldn’t handle rejection.

    Dead because she owed her brother a boon and he had called it in.

    As goddess of the hunt, Artemis often relished a successful kill. This time, she didn’t. This time, it left a sour taste in her mouth. Overhead, the white crow cawed and circled. Part of her wished to shoot it down for the trouble it had wrought. It was the bird who’d doomed this man, that woman. The unborn child in her womb. Apollo’s child. Artemis’ very own niece or nephew.

    The bird had alerted Apollo to Coronis’ infidelity, sealed her fate.

    Thank you, dear sister, Apollo said as he appeared at her side. She looked at him. Where her coloring was pale and silvery, her twin brother was golden and tanned. The moon and the sun.

    You do not need to do this. Wait until she gives birth at least. Artemis knew it was hopeless. Her brother would never see reason.

    They always betray me. The bitterness in his voice and hardened expression made her heart ache. While she didn’t approve of most of her brother’s choices, he was her twin. She loved him. It didn’t help that their own father, Zeus, had never shown Apollo what a loving relationship looked like.

    Please, let this stop here. The man is dead. Let that be her punishment.

    Draw your next arrow, sister. He didn’t even look at her.

    Apollo… she pleaded. She is with child.

    Strike her in the heart, or I will do it with my bare hands.

    That would be so much worse. The princess had cared for Apollo too. To have him kill her… She couldn’t allow it to happen. With a sob, she nocked another arrow. The mother-of-pearl inlays in her bow caught the moonlight through the trees, and Coronis looked up from where she held her dead lover in her arms. The woman was beautiful, with hair as black as ebony and skin kissed by the sun. It was no wonder Apollo was drawn to her. Coronis stared right at Artemis, blue eyes awash with grief. As the mortal’s lips parted, Artemis let fly the arrow, not wanting to hear pleas that would only go on deaf ears.

    The deed was done.

    Beside her, the white crow landed on a low branch of a tree and cawed. At the sound, Apollo threw his head back and roared. Flames exploded in the clearing, surrounding the dead lovers. It spread to the tree and engulfed it and the crow instantly. The bird screamed and burst outward, landing in the stream nearby to escape the heat. When it emerged, its feathers were no longer white, but solid black, and then, unbidden, the crow shifted into the form of a woman with waves of brown hair and green eyes. She stood before them, naked, but she did not cover herself in shame. Instead, she kneeled before them, head bowed. No words were uttered from her lips, for she knew, as Artemis had, that Apollo would not tolerate excuses while in his current mood.

    You should have clawed their eyes out instead of coming to me, Apollo said angrily. You are just as guilty of what occurred this night as I am, Corvus. His voice deepened and the ground shook. From this day forward, I curse your kind. You and those like you are harbingers of death and destruction, doomed to change form only to alert mortals of coming woe. He paused, kneeling to lift her chin and force her to meet his gaze. Understand that any hapless mortal you love will die if they see what you really are. Those of us touched by magic can never hide their true nature. Not for long.

    Corvus sobbed silently but didn’t dare move away.

    Artemis placed a hand on her brother’s shoulder. You still have time to save your child.

    He looked at her as though he hadn’t understood, and then his gaze drifted to the clearing, still burning. The flames were closing in on the spot where Coronis and Ischys lay lifeless and cold. As though he only remembered his former lover had been with child, he shouted, My son!

    Vanishing, he swiftly reappeared next to the bodies. Artemis looked away as he worked on removing the child from the dead woman’s belly. If the infant was truly Apollo’s child and not Ischys’, then it was a demi-god. It still had time to live, but not even immortals could survive fire.

    Corvus reached out to Artemis’ white robe and drew her attention back to her. Help me, she whispered, Undo his curse. My family…

    Anger swelled in Artemis’ gut. You brought this on yourself. By trying to gain Apollo’s favor, you only brought his wrath down on all of you. Because of you, these two are dead, and for what?

    I didn’t want this. The woman trembled as tears stained her cheeks. What can I do?

    Hide yourself. Your daughters too. Only the females in Corvus’ family had the ability to become birds. If you wish to end the line with you, hope your daughters only have male children. Demand they never marry. The curse cannot be undone.

    If Corvus was lucky, over time the trait of shape-changing would fade and no longer burden them. It would die out all on its own.

    A baby’s cry broke the air as Apollo returned beside her, pride mixing with sorrow as he stared down at the bloodied child. It is…a male. A son. I will name him Asclepius. He smiled, but it quickly faded. He has her eyes.

    Apollo…

    Ice remained in his tone. Chiron will raise this child. It pains me too much to look at him.

    The centaur? Before she could ask what he was thinking, he disappeared, leaving her alone with Corvus and the burning bodies. Artemis let her gaze fall back toward the carnage and clutched her bow tightly. The lovers hadn’t deserved to end this way. Using more magic than she wished to dispel on the mortal plane, Artemis sent Coronis into the heavens where her body broke apart into bright lights and arranged themselves far, far away as stars. A constellation in the shape of a crow, a cautionary tale to be wary of those who seek to do others harm for personal gain.

    Nothing ever comes from such treachery. Corvus’ daughters would now bear the burden of the curse, which she could not save them from.

    May the gods have mercy upon them.

    Chapter 1

    Present Day

    Ravyn Corvus stared at her cell phone screen as her mother called for the thirty-seventh time today. She hit ignore and shoved it back into her pocket. While she knew she risked everybody she came into contact with due to her act of rebellion, someone in the family needed to change their fate. No matter how careful the Corvus women were, people still died every day. No one could escape fate, and giving up their own lives and well-being did nothing but make them miserable and bitter.

    The ferry horn blared over the choppy waters of the Atlantic, and she tried to smile, though the action seemed foreign. She thought elation would have kicked in by now. She’d gotten her way. After moving city to city so she couldn’t make strong connections or friendships through middle and high school in fear of, well, heralding her potential friends’ deaths, Ravyn had secured a scholarship to a college far from home and her family. She would finally live her life without being smothered by warnings and unsolicited advice. Don’t fall in love. Sleep around; otherwise, you’ll become attached, and if you predict their death by shifting, you’ll be crushed. What will people say when you’re the link between a bunch of mysterious deaths?

    She was free now as an adult. So why did Ravyn feel like she was setting herself up for one huge disaster? Oh, yeah…because everyone kept telling her that she was the bringer of disaster and there was nothing to do about it. Right.

    As the ferry pulled up to the Kasper Island dock, Ravyn stood from her seat, threw on her backpack and extended the handles on her two suitcases, then headed toward the line of students excited to embark on this new semester of campus life. She’d chosen Kasper Island University, KIU, because it was isolated, on the opposite side of the country, and had a

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