Munson | Leap of Faith | E-Book | www.sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, Band 2, 384 Seiten

Reihe: Fall From Grace

Munson Leap of Faith


1. Auflage 2013
ISBN: 978-1-908600-19-6
Verlag: Inspired Quill
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection

E-Book, Englisch, Band 2, 384 Seiten

Reihe: Fall From Grace

ISBN: 978-1-908600-19-6
Verlag: Inspired Quill
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection





Leap of Faith is the second novel from Matthew Munson,
following the adventures of characters we first met in Fall From Grace - human
and angel alike.

The lives of Paul and Joseph have changed over the past two
years; Paul is on Earth, living a new life with his girlfriend, while Joseph is
in heaven, living as an angel and still mourning the loss of his sister,
Lauren.

But war is once again on the horizon of the two worlds.

Barriers between the realms are breaking down, and humans,
angels and spirits have set their sights on a catastrophic course of events
that will result in the destruction of everything around them. That is, unless
Paul and Joseph - with some divine intervention - can stop a war between an
angelic army and countless spirits.

Munson Leap of Faith jetzt bestellen!

Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


The fallen angel slept. It was a deep and enforced sleep. He had remained in that state for 2,000 years – except recently, when he had awoken for a few short, glorious hours. But after his task had been done, he had consented to return to slumber so that his human host could live out a normal and full life on Earth. He was a powerful angel, the eldest son of the Almighty himself a leader of angels, and he was willing to wait his turn. By remaining alive, he would have killed his host – and he would not allow that to happen. It had taken him a long time, but he had learnt the value of life – whomever it belonged to. In his sleep, he dreamt of another time, when he was younger, angrier … a time when he had made mistakes. Lucifer slept – inside the head of a human called Paul Finn, who relied on the angel’s continued submission for his own existence. The cosmos unfolded before her as she woke, starlight stretching out like endless fields. As her consciousness returned from its long sleep, she rejoiced in the knowledge that she was once again free. How long has it been? She had been imprisoned now for … how long had it been? She tried to answer the question, and realised she was unable to. She lost focus for a moment, terror biting at the edge of her consciousness; doing her best to control it, she spun round and studied the stars. They’re all wrong! she realised. I’ve been asleep for so long that even the stars have shifted position! Her consciousness felt … fuzzy around the edges from waking up. The sleep had been forced upon her, and she resented it. Whilst she rejoiced at being awake again, she hated the thought that she had missed so much activity. I used to know everything, she thought, and now I know close to nothing. She hesitated; whilst she wasn’t one for introspection, she found herself pausing in thought for a moment. I remember something. As it came to her, an emotion came along with it: anger. She felt it raging though her as she remembered. I remember what the angels did to me. If she had been human, her face would have clearly shown her frustration and anger, but she wasn’t human – nor was she angelic. She was something else, and glad of it; she couldn’t bear the thought of being trapped in a limited and pathetic physical body. She was a spirit, and she had been imprisoned and humiliated by angels for far too long. She could feel the rage inside of her, threatening to overwhelm her thoughts with its desire for revenge and hatred for everything that wasn’t a spirit. I will have my revenge, Poena told herself, but on my own terms. I will not let the rage win; I’m back, and I will defeat the angels before they know what’s happening. The cosmos was vast; with their telescopes and satellites, humans could see into the interstellar realm further than they had been able to even fifty years before, but they could only see the merest fraction of what was truly there – and understood the most slender proportion of that knowledge. It was as a result of these advances that Poena existed. She had been protector of the astral plane until her imprisonment of sleep. The changes were human in origin; they were trying to fracture the supposedly unbreachable barrier between the physical and astral planes. And that’s meant to be impossible. However, as much as she wished it wasn’t the case, some humans were clearly getting better at the endeavour – and that was what had first awoken her. There was a group in a small corner of Earth called The Seekers of Truth, and they were becoming problematic. Poena had always protected the astral plane from incursions, and was more determined now than ever before that she would continue to do so. She had to concede that The Seekers of Truth were clearly good; they were learning how to separate mind from body and explore the other realms. Spurred on by so many reports of strange, paranormal activity, they had pooled their resources and begun exploring out there. What the Seekers didn’t realise was that whenever they attempted to travel into these other realms, they disturbed the spirits who lived there. While no-one had yet managed to fully infiltrate their realm, the fact that human beings were getting closer concerned and frightened them. Spirits were protective, and were angry that humans were trying to invade the one place that was theirs. And rightly so. Poena had heard the Spirits’ anger and jealousy – and fed off the raw energy it supplied. She had awoken to their cries of anger and rage, and she felt suffused with it, and nourished by it. They will listen to me now, she thought. The spirits, they need me now … and I need them. I need them to help take my revenge on those who betrayed me. Evan Somerville lay down on the cot bed and closed his eyes; that wasn’t strictly necessary for what he was about to do, but he found it easier to focus when he shut out the world around him. He was a slight man, with sandy hair, piercing green eyes and just about 5’9” in height. Whilst Somerville wasn’t physically powerful, his personality was far stronger; the Seekers under his control respected and feared him in equal measure, and he encouraged the fear. It ensures my position, he thought. He felt the straps wrap tightly around his forearms, securely fastening him to the metal frame. Then the same ties wound around his legs, waist and forehead. He had authorised that measure himself; two separate Seekers had failed to come back mentally intact after they had tried to move beyond this world and into the next. They had jumped from their cots and tried to rip their eyes from their sockets, screaming insanely about things that had tried to enter their head and invade their thoughts. Plastic pads, hooked to the brainwave monitor, were gently stuck to either side of his forehead, the coolness of the glue bringing a welcome relief to the overbearing warmth of the room. I must authorise some air conditioning in here, he thought, not for the first time. When I wake up, I’ll get Rachael to – He blinked, surprised by his lapse. Although he tried to force her from his mind as much as possible, his guilty secret was that he was still incredibly fond of her, even after everything. “Are you alright, Mr Somerville?” The voice of his assistant, Joshua McKenzie, brought him back to the present; he pushed all thoughts of Rachael – and the past – away. Now is not the time for nostalgia. He grew excited, as he always did just before he travelled. How can moving into another veil of existence ever get boring? “Let’s begin.” He let his mind wander, allowing it to pull away from his body and move beyond the physical world. As always, he felt liberated. His ability to separate his soul from his body was a special one, he knew, but one he had carefully cultivated. He thrived on his ability to seek out what was beyond the mundane world he lived in. One day I’ll understand what’s truly out there. Somerville hadn’t realised it, but in the early hours of this summer’s day, he was about to do something no-one in his fledgling organisation had managed to do before. He broke through the barrier that separated the physical and astral planes – and his soul arrived inside the astral plane. The Seven Sisters slept fitfully, and had done so since the Great War. They had accepted a punishment that wasn’t entirely their own, to try and heal the wounds that had fragmented the angel and spirit societies. This hadn’t been the Civil War, where angel had fought angel, but an earlier War, between angels, spirits and them – and they had, to their shock and horror, lost. A handful of times over the last untold millennia, the Seven Sisters had stirred from their slumber, hoping that the time was ripe for them to return, but it never had been. Now, however, things were different. Poena was one of the few beings that watched over them. The Civil War in Heaven had caused a lot to be forgotten in the ensuing chaos, but she had remembered. She had awoken in confusion, unable to remember all of her past, but could remember this. I lost at the end of that war as well, she thought ruefully. The angels would say they had done us a kindness, but did they really? Or did they betray anyone who wasn’t like them? She found herself torn; did she stop the Sisters from re-awakening, or did she step back and allow the inevitable War to restart? But what will happen to us? she wondered. The spirits – what will happen to us? We will be caught in the middle of these two ancient sides again – and it will hurt us more now than ever before. And will I ever then get my revenge? Poena paused as she felt something, on the edge of her consciousness; it took her a moment to realise what it was she was sensing. The astral plane had been breached! Her first thoughts moved towards the angels, but that was quickly dismissed; she...



Ihre Fragen, Wünsche oder Anmerkungen
Vorname*
Nachname*
Ihre E-Mail-Adresse*
Kundennr.
Ihre Nachricht*
Lediglich mit * gekennzeichnete Felder sind Pflichtfelder.
Wenn Sie die im Kontaktformular eingegebenen Daten durch Klick auf den nachfolgenden Button übersenden, erklären Sie sich damit einverstanden, dass wir Ihr Angaben für die Beantwortung Ihrer Anfrage verwenden. Selbstverständlich werden Ihre Daten vertraulich behandelt und nicht an Dritte weitergegeben. Sie können der Verwendung Ihrer Daten jederzeit widersprechen. Das Datenhandling bei Sack Fachmedien erklären wir Ihnen in unserer Datenschutzerklärung.