DAUGHTER OF THE MOON
YA Urban Fantasy
64,000
QUERY:
Seventeen-year-old Selina Kane has always known she is different, but never imagined she is last-living-necromancer different -- not until she starts speaking the language of the Underworld and visiting Acherusian Lake in her dreams. And then Blake storms into her life, claiming to be her bonded protector and making her blush and stumble over her words. Blake warns Selina about an enemy from a past she can't remember: Ciara, queen of the undead.
Before long, the undead attack and Selina watches helplessly through the only spell she can conjure -- a protective shield -- as Blake is dragged away in her place. Selina turns to the necromantic powers she hardly knows how to use, risking her life to search for Blake in the Underworld. But Selina doesn't find his soul resting peacefully in Acherusian Lake. Blake's been transformed into one of the undead, and the guards of the Underworld expect their necromancer to find and destroy him.
Selina doesn't care what the guards' idea of her duty as a necromancer is; she's determined to get Blake back in one piece. There is a spell, one that would save Blake's soul, but she'd have to kill him to use it, and worse, transform him into a ferryman for the Underworld. There may be another way to save him, if she's willing to make dark alliances with the undead. Selina knows she shouldn't, but with Blake's life in jeopardy, the line between good and evil starts to blur.
First 150 Words:
As far as Selina knew, she was the only seventeen-year-old with her own burial plot. And once a year, she looked forward to nothing so much as visiting her grave.
5:44am. Just one more minute.
The glowing red digits of her alarm clock stared back at her from the insides of her closed eyelids.
Breathe in, breathe out.
Music blared from the alarm, scattering the silence.
Selina flung aside her comforter and leapt to the floor. She’d already dressed the night before, so all she had to do was slip into her sneakers.
The stairs creaked as she tiptoed downstairs. She darted through the living room and quietly closed the front door behind herself. But before Selina could get to her bike, her older sister appeared from around her car.
"What're you doing up so early? School doesn't start for another hour and a half," Jess said.
WANT!
ReplyDeletePlease send your query in the body of the email, and first three chapters attached in a Word document to jessa [at] curiosityquills [dot] com.
This sounds interesting and I would love to read more. Please send your query and first three chapters in the body of an email to theresa(at)entangledpublishing(dot)com.
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