Crusader

Crusader
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The last book of the Wayfarerer Redemption, an enthralling continuation of The Axis trilogy, by the bestselling Australian author Sara DouglassThe protecting magical forests of Minstrelsea have been blasted from the surface of Tencendor, leaving demons and Hawkchildren free to feed. At the Maze, Queteb stands victorious over the body of Caelum SunSoar yet boiling with anger that the true Enemy Reborn, the Starson, has escaped destruction. With his unholy army of demon-corrupted men and beasts around him Queteb begins the search for the only man who can now defeat him.Bound to the temporary safety of the cave of Sanctuary, the survivors of Tencendor mourn the loss of Caelum and struggle to come to terms with the traitorous Drago’s true identity. Now, as DragonStar the StarSon, Drago must prepare the unwilling Tencendorians for Queteb’s onslaught.But treachery from within the SunSoar family itself threatens to undermine Drago’s new-found powers and will prove fatally decisive in the final battle for Tencendor.

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SARA DOUGLASS

Crusader

Book Three of The Wayfarer Redemption


Contents

Cover

Title Page

Map

16. Fischer

17. Escape from Sanctuary

18. The Joy of the Hunt

19. The Apple

20. Qeteb’s Mansion of Dreams

21. Legal Niceties

22. The Sacred Groves

23. Niah Reborn

24. Zenith

25. Into the Sacred Groves

26. A Gloomy and Pain-Raddled Night

27. Axis Resumes a Purpose

28. Destruction

29. Family Relations

30. The Unexpected Heavens

31. StarLaughter’s Astonishing Turnabout

32. Revival

33. Urbeth’s Plan

34. WolfStar Feels Better

35. Dispersal

36. Pretty Brown Sal

37. Settling In

38. Sanctuary No More

39. Night: I

40. Night: II

41. The Avenue

42. Of Commitment

43. StarLaughter’s Quest

44. The Heart Incarnate

45. Trouble

46. Hidden Conversations

47. The Door

48. Gwendylyr’s Problem

49. The Butler’s Rule

50. The Memories of the Enemy

51. Sliding South

52. A Marital Reunion

53. Sigholt

54. A Troubled Night’s Dreaming

55. A Tastier Revenge Than Ever Imagined

56. StarLaughter’s Awful Mistake

57. South, Ever South

58. Sweetly, Innocently, Happily…

59. Midwiving Deity

60. The General’s Instructions

61. For the Love of a Bear Cub

62. Katie, Katie, Katie…

63. Hunting Through the Landscape

64. The Most Appalling Choice of All

65. Abandoned

66. Choose, DragonStar!

67. Bring Me My Bow of Burning Gold…

68. Twisted City

69. Light and Love

70. The Witness

71. The Waiting

72. The Tree

73. The Garden

Epilogue

Glossary

Acknowledgements

About the Author

Also by Sara Douglass

Copyright

About the Publisher


“What can we do?” Fischer said uselessly, but needing the comfort of an endlessly repeated question. “What can we do? Bloody what, you ask?”

“Easy, mate.” Henry Fielding laid a hand on Fischer’s tense forearm.

Fischer shifted his arm away then turned his head towards the far, windowless wall. He was in his seventies, a white-haired, emaciated old man, his face deeply lined with the forty-year struggle against the evil that had savaged — pervaded, consumed, destroyed — his world.

When it had begun he’d been a man in his prime: copper-haired, bright-eyed, lithe and energetic, determined to fight and destroy the invading beings.

“Demons” was a strange, horrid word that Fischer had only now learned to use, but which he still found completely distasteful.

“Demons” did not fit a world that was based almost entirely on scientific theory. On logical explanation. On provable fact. On the complete belief in technology that was far more acceptable and comfortable than religious beliefs. “Evil” did not exist. Only scientific fact existed. Only the vagaries of nature and as-yet-to-be- controlled-and-predicted geographical events existed. Only the selfish and arrogant nature of human society existed. Only petty crime by social misfits and corporate crime by the socially successful existed.

Evil had no place in this most rational and explainable of worlds.

Until it dropped out of the sky over New York one blithe and fair Sunday morning.

That was what took us three decades to come to terms with, Fischer thought. The idea that we’d been invaded, not by pastel-coloured and elegantly-elongated extraterrestrials with great dark eyes in shiny Spielberg-like metal-pocked spaceships, but by pure, and utterly hungrily angry, Evil.

And thus for three decades pure Evil in the shape of the TimeKeeper Demons ran amok. Countries were laid waste, save for the moaning, shuffling crazed populations that roamed their dusty surfaces. Cities were abandoned, jungles stripped of foliage, oceans dried and ravaged. Within a year the human population of earth had gone from billions to a few pitiful ten thousand huddled in bunkers, waiting out the demonic hours, and wondering how they could strike back.

The ten thousand were those left sane, of course. There were still countless millions left roaming above ground, their minds completely unhinged, utterly demonised, noisily breeding — and entirely successfully — countless millions of genetically insane babies. Those infants that survived their first five years uneaten (or only partially eaten), grew into even worse monsters than their parents.

Fischer shuddered. The insane (and by now there were billions of them) were still out there, haunting the as yet unreclaimed surface of the planet.

He and his companions might have managed to trap and dismember Qeteb, but the other five Demons continued to howl their destructive way about the planet.

They had trapped and dismembered Qeteb, but not destroyed him.

This was the problem Fischer and his companions now faced. What to do? What to do?

“The other Demons will break through the barriers within the month,” said Katrina Fielding, Henry’s wife. She’d been the one to suggest the idea that the Demons could be trapped by reflecting their own malevolence back at them.



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