Who
is D K Gaston?
Darin
is the author of more than a dozen books ranging from Speculative
Fiction to Crime novels. His first book was published in 2007. After
serving five years in the military, he began college, earning a
degree in Computer Science. Since earning his degree he's gone on to
earn two Masters degree in Technology Management and Business
Administration. His experience in the military and computer sciences
has shaped many of his stories and characters over the years. He also
writes under the name Keith Gaston.
Taurus
Moon
My most
reason speculative fiction novel is Taurus Moon: Magic & Mayhem,
which is the follow-up to Taurus Moon: Relic Hunter. Taurus makes his
living by searching for supernatural artifacts for anyone willing to
pay his price. These two novels are among my favorite because it
allows me to express my humor as much as the fast-paced actions
throughout the books.
Book
Description
Taurus
Moon: Magic & Mayhem is a fast-paced action and fantasy novel,
sprinkled with humor. After saving the lives of a family about to be
slaughtered by Lycans, Taurus and Gully are pulled into a realm where
magic is supreme and technology is nonexistent. They must travel
through harsh lands to find their way home.
The uneasy
alliance between an evil sorceress queen, Morgana le Fay, and Grimes,
a Lycan king, is threatened because of the relic hunter's and mage's
presence. Taurus and Gully will have to use every trick they've every
learned to survive the looming battle, but will it be enough?
Excerpt
Chapter
One
Gully’s
lungs burned, and cold sweat dripped down his face, but he couldn’t
stop running, because stopping meant death.
Shadowing
them on all fours, their stalkers were urged on with an inhuman need
to slaughter. The heavy pounding of their massive paws against the
frozen landscape grew ever closer. He pictured his pursuers’
tongues lolling from their mouths, salivating with anticipation.
Wails filled the night; their terrifying howls alerting others of
their pack that the chase was nearly over.
Gully
had hoped the thick trees would offer him and the people he’d
rescued, places to conceal themselves, but it wasn’t to be. The
predators’ night vision could penetrate the dark with ease and
their sense of smell could detect the four of them wherever they may
hide.
Desperation
begged that he plunge deeper into the woods. More than once, he’d
seen what the claws and teeth of the predators could do to human
flesh—saw the terror frozen in the eyes of their dead victims.
Gully saw that same fear in the eyes of the family he was trying to
protect. A hard knot had gotten trapped in his throat when the small
girl glanced in his direction. Her gaze became saucers and she
mouthed a silent scream.
Gully
forced himself to twist his neck around to glance over his shoulder
toward whatever she saw. He spotted the blood red glow of their
ominous eyes first, then saw three of the beasts leap out from the
darkness, their maws snapping open and close with enthusiasm as they
anticipated flesh being trapped between their razor-sharp teeth.
The
girl finally gave voice to her scream. It was time to stop running.
Gully turned on his heels and faced the rampaging creatures.
Exhausted and out of breath, he struggled to control his panic. Every
fiber of his being shouted for him to continue running, but deep
inside he knew that running would only get them killed. Gully shoved
his fear aside, not for himself, but for the small girl and her
parents.
The
werewolves hastened their charge.
***
I
sliced a jagged line across Darla’s neck with the silver blade from
my wrist-mount to let her father know, I was serious about killing
her. A thin line of warm blood trickled down her throat to her naked
body. Grimes snarled, but stopped his advance toward me. His long
abnormal fingernails and fangs retracted. Red menacing eyes reverted
back to lifeless gray ones. As the dark brown fur slowly withdrew
back into his skin, he grew smaller by several feet as he returned to
his natural six-four height.
Grimes,
naked and fully human, did not bother to hide his manhood, and he
stared at me as if I was the one wrongly dressed for the occasion.
“You are bluffing, Moon. You would not kill my daughter in cold
blood,” he said not sounding entirely convinced of his words.
Under
my grasp, Darla snarled like a wild animal and said, “He’s weak,
father! Kill him now!”
“Take
it easy, princess. No one has to be hurt here tonight,” I
whispered. I spoke to her father in a louder voice with as much
confidence as I could. “Make one move, Grimes, and I’ll take off
her head. Trust me, I don’t bluff.”
“That’s
not exactly true, sir. Since my association with you, you have,
indeed, deceived your way out of five precarious situations,”
Mosley said deadpan while in his holographic Idris Elba form.
Grimes,
Darla and I slowly turned our gaze to the hologram. “You’re not
supposed to let the bad guys know you might be bluffing, Mosley. Sort
of defeats the purpose, don’t you think?” I scolded.
The
hologram winced in apology then his image disappeared. Sometimes, I
wondered if Mosley was with me or against me.
Grimes
smiled, his teeth elongating once again. “My daughter and I shall
have white wine as we dine on your flesh tonight, Moon.”
I
gritted my teeth and narrowed my eyes at him. “Despite what my
blabbermouth friend said, I will cut her throat!” Something in my
expression or body language told him I spoke the truth, because his
teeth became human-like again.
“You
dare call my daughter and me bad guys, when it was you and your
conjurer friend that broke into my castle in a pitiful attempt to rob
me!”
Can
you believe this guy? “You’re just going to skate over the fact
that, in the midst of our pitiful attempt at robbery, Gully and I
saved the lives of a family you and your darling princess here, were
about to make a meal of. Here’s a tidbit of information for you.
Eating innocent folks definitely places you and Darla on the wrong
side of righteousness.”
Darla
squirmed in my grip perhaps to break my hold, but I wasn’t having
that. I pressed the silver blade tighter against her neck, drawing
more blood from her. “Play nice,” I whispered into her ear.
“We
have to eat,” she said defensively, as if that justified
everything. “How else do you expect us to live?”
I
shook my head, bowled over by the question. “That’s why the world
has frozen meat sections in supermarkets, princess. You and I both
know it’s not a prerequisite for werewolves to feed on human flesh.
Raw meat is all you need to survive.”
“We
are predators. We hunt for our food,” Grimes huffed. “You have no
right to be here--no right to take our prey!”
“You’re
only half right, buddy,” I retorted. “I don’t have any legal
right to invade your home, but I do have a noble one. I need
something from you. Not to keep… only to borrow,” I said, trying
to gain some sort of control over the situation. I needed to nullify
them before things got worse.
Grimes
stood ramrod straight and folded his arms together. “You are
joking, correct? My daughter is your prisoner, and you expect me to
let you borrow something from my castle?”
“Kill
him, father,” Darla yelled, as she shifted slightly, readying
herself to make a move.
I
lifted the flat of the blade, scratched off a thin layer of skin from
her neck, and then gave her a solid tap underneath the chin. “Will
you shut the hell up? Grown folks are talking here.”
She
didn’t like that at all.
Too
late, I realized, I’d gone too far with my belittling of her.
In
an instant, Darla went into full animal state, growing two feet in
height with hair covering her entire body. Two inch fangs and long
fingernails as sharp and strong as the finest steel knives were only
seconds away from ripping into me. I stood at a crossroads in a split
second of indecision—if I cut off her head, Grimes would be on top
of me with a father’s fury like no other—if I did nothing, Darla
would eventually get the upper hand in her stronger animal state. I
hesitated a moment too long with my conundrum.
In
a flash, she batted my arm away from her neck and heaved her head
rearward, slamming the back of her skull hard against my forehead. In
pain, I reeled backwards several steps, my vision an explosion of
colors. I swung my blade wide and wild to make sure they couldn’t
get close while I tried to regain focus. I could have used Gully
right then and there, but he was busy getting that family Grimes and
Darla had planned to eat to safety.
By
the time my vision cleared, I saw that they had moved away to a safe
distance. Both father and daughter were now full werewolves, and they
both drooled at me with hunger in their eyes. Standing side-by-side,
they looked at each other, then spoke in a series of grunts and
growls, apparently debating who would get the first chunk of my
flesh.
Grimes
took a step back, letting Darla take the lead, an indication that
they’d made their choice. I glanced over my shoulder, weighing what
my chances would be if I sprinted down the corridor. There were no
doors or turns, at least not until I’d ran down the long stretch
for about thirty yards.
I
would never make it. If I turned away to run, Darla would be on top
of me before I took three steps, biting and clawing into my back. My
pistols were already emptied from an earlier encounter. Though I had
spare magazines, I’d never have time to reload. Left with the
choice to fight, I planted my feet into a defensive posture and
readied myself. One thing was in my favor—they’d decided to come
at me one at a time.
Darla
let out what I guessed was a laugh as she advanced toward me. She
leapt to her left. Her paws pounded heavily against the left wall, as
she launched herself to the wall on the opposite side. She bounded
back and forth across the walls in a zigzag fashion so fast that she
was almost a blur, in what I assumed was an attempt to disorientate
me. I didn’t focus on her movements; it would have been impossible
to track her that way. Instead, I listened to the timing of her paws
as they made contact on the hard surface.
In
my head, I counted down, three-two-one. Quickly dropping to one knee,
I sliced my blade across the air above me. A dark shadow passed
overhead at the same time. A gush of warm air and the smell of foul
breath brushed against my face. An incredible weight fell on top of
me. Darla and I went barrel rolling down the corridor. Her body
stopped its momentum before mine. I continued rolling another few
feet and landed on my back. Dizzy and aching, I lifted my head and
tried to gain my bearings.
Darla
was sprawled on the floor, and blood and spit overflowed from the
severed jaw she worked desperately to put back together. My strike
wasn’t a killing blow, but I’d nearly sliced her head in two.
Darla’s supernatural restoration ability would eventually heal the
wound. For the meantime, she would be out of the fight. Scrambling to
my feet, I noticed my tumble with the princess had shortened the
distance to the end of the corridor.
An
anguished howl came from her father, who charged down the hallway.
Leaping over Darla, Grimes made a beeline for me.
Already
in mid-turn, I ran. Unlike Darla, her father wouldn’t be nearly as
easy to subdue. He had a thousand years of fighting in armies
throughout history under his belt. He also wasn’t as headstrong as
her and had a habit of never underestimating his enemies. Lucky for
me, Grimes wasn’t as agile or fast as his daughter. Immortal or
not, he still suffered from the slow downs of aging.
I
made it to the end of the hall and took a sharp left. Antique tables,
vases and artwork adorned the walls. I retracted my blade, and pushed
over anything I could get my hands on to slow him down. It didn’t
work out as I’d hoped. Rather than duck and weave through the
mayhem, he barreled through it as if there were no obstructions.
I
groped in my pocket for a magazine and inserted the clip into my
pistol. All the rounds were laced with silver. Stopping my run, I
whirled around and raised my weapon to shoot. There was nothing
behind me but smashed furniture and artwork. Grimes had disappeared.
Cursing under my breath, I muttered, “This is not good.” I knew
he could attack from any direction. Grimes’ castle probably had a
network of secret passages running from every room and corridor. No
matter which way I proceeded, I was likely to run into an ambush.
The
best maneuver would be to stay where I was and try to find a way out
of his little mousetrap. “Mosley, I need you,” I whispered,
though I might as well have spoke with a bullhorn, knowing Grimes’
enhanced hearing in his wolf state could detect a pin drop a mile
away.
“Is
that absolutely necessary, sir? I mean, can’t you do this alone?”
Mosley answered.
“Do
we really need to have this conversation, you crazy computer? Of
course it’s necessary, otherwise I wouldn’t be calling out to you
for help,” I said frantically as I watched for an attack.
He
let out a synthesized exhaustive breath. “Very well, sir.” Mosley
appeared beside me clutching a chimney poker like a baseball bat.
“How may I be of service?”
“Give
me an overlay of the castle’s interior and then point out any heat
signatures other than my own.”
Mosley’s
form changed from Idris Elba to a three dimensional map. Red blips
indicated Grimes and his daughter. Darla remained where I had left
her, but her father was quickly circling around to get ahead of me if
I continued down the hallway. I was about to turn in the opposite
direction, heading back toward Darla when more red blips appeared on
the first level of the castle.
I
pointed to the new blips. “Are there any cameras on that level you
can tap into for a visual?” I asked, knowing he’d already
bypassed Grimes’ security systems. Before Gully and I entered the
castle, I had Mosley program in a loop into all the cameras to mask
our illegal entry.
“Wait
one moment, sir.” The overlay faded for several seconds and then
was replaced with a visual of the first floor.
My
heart pounded like a drum in my chest. Things had just gone from bad
to a hell of a lot worse. Entering the castle like they’d been
invited to an-all-you-can-eat dinner were a dozen or so large
werewolves. They headed up the front and rear stairways, and used all
the elevators. That howl from Grimes earlier hadn’t been anguish
over his injured daughter as I had thought. It had been a clever call
for backup.
TM:
Relic Hunter is available in the following formats:
TM:
Magic & Mayhem is available in the following formats:
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