Dark of the Moon Audiobook (Free) | AudioBooksLoft

Dark of the Moon Audiobook (Free)

Summary:

‘Tai-tastigon is burning. The whole city is within an uproar. And the cause, Jame, and her friend Marc have fled. They may be making their way through mountain goes by, far too late in the season, searching for Jame’s sibling Tori somewhere on the other hand. Nothing ever will go very easily for Jame, least of most this journey. As tips of days gone by she’s forgotten-of dark and horrid years inside your home of Gerridon, betrayer of her people, the Kencyrath, and her god-come to the top, she encounters about Dark of the Moon changers from the house of Gerridon, wanting to provide her back to that dark place. Arrin-ken, catlike animals who are nevertheless a part of her very own people, find and judge her. Bandits, brigands and unusual remnants from the past of her people-which recommend a dim future for them, their god and their hope of defeating the fantastic enemy, Perimal Darkling-arise to haunt her. But her dedication to find her brother also to avoid falling into eternal darkness only grows stronger. Meanwhile Tori, who is Highlord of the Kencyrath, prospects the wayward lords from the Kencyrath with uneasy grace. He’s a compromise for them, a means of avoiding countless battle between them. But he can bind them jointly only as long as he can tread a small method between their assorted desires and needs. When a huge and unexpected risk threatens, he must call up the host-the soldiers that every lord must muster-but by doing this he threatens his personal position and his sanity, for he cannot avoid the interest this phone calls to him, attention that seems to provide changers who wish to eliminate him, and odd nightmares that appear to suggest another he does not want as well as the reappearance of a sister he both loves and worries. Jame and Marc made an appearance 1st in God Stalk, where Jame found that she experienced odd powers and that she did not need a past to change forever the continuing future of those around her. Within this second reserve, she is just as hard on her friends, and her enemies, as she was in the 1st. But knowing her past, knowing how near she is always to the brink of an individual catastrophe she cannot acknowledge, she must now consider each stage she takes more carefully. This will not mean that either she, or for that matter, Tori, will ever end up being less than wild and unexpected. It only implies that both must count number and accept the cost of their activities. It is a means of living neither is certainly ready for.’