Date Published: 05-22-2024
Publisher: Evolved Publishing
If you had the chance to remake the world, what kind of world would you choose?
When tragedy strikes Lucas Mack's young life, he desperately yearns to escape its sorrow, and takes an improbable leap through the mythical maelstrom. Rather than splashing down on the far side like his neighbors, he's transported to a magical realm where he has the power to redefine not only who he is, but the world in which he resides.
As he stumbles about trying to find his way, he meets Mia, an equally troubled fellow pilgrim. With the help of a mystical guide and an aging wizard, they navigate the enchanted land while learning to control their newfound powers. Yet this realm is more complex than they expected, with seasoned sorcerers who've been corrupted by the sinister side of magic.
Limited by natural law and seduced by magic's power, they are tested as never before. Will the gift of magic bring renewed hope or drive them to the edge of the void?
Read an excerpt below
About the Author
The urge to write first struck at age sixteen when working on a newsletter at a youth encampment in the woods of northern Maine. It may have been the wild night when lightning flashed at sunset followed by the northern lights rippling after dark. Or maybe it was the newsletter's editor, a girl with eyes the color of the ocean. But he was inspired to write about the blurry line between reality and the fantastic.
Using two fingers and lots of white-out, he religiously typed five pages a day throughout college and well into his twenties. Then life intervened. He paused to raise two sons and pursue a career, in the process -- and without prior plan -- becoming a well-known entrepreneur in the software industry, founding several successful companies. When he found time again to daydream, the urge to write returned.
David now lives in the Great Northwest. He no longer limits himself to five pages a day and is thankful every keystroke for the invention of the word processor.
Contact Links
Facebook: David Litwack - Author
Twitter: @DavidLitwack
Excerpt from "The Maker of Worlds"
PART 1 – THE MAELSTROM
When the cold of winter comes
Starless night will cover day,
In the veiling of the sun
We will walk in bitter rain,
But in dreams I can hear your name
And in dreams We will meet again
~ Fran Walsh
Chapter 1 – The Departure
All stories begin with a question, and this is mine: if you
had the chance to remake the world, what kind of world would you choose?
Let me start from the beginning.
The day before my leap, spring had peeked above the horizon.
A bolder sun had inspired buds to sprout on the branches, so tiny they stood
out only when moistened by the morning dew. A smattering of flowers had bloomed
as well, daffodils and the tips of tulips that showed more as promise.
Forsythias bulged yellow, lilacs blossomed and spread their fragrance, and the
air tasted fresher too, as if purified by the increased sunlight. A time for
hope.
But not for me. The arrival of spring did nothing to remove
the cloud that had shadowed my days and darkened my dreams these past six
months.
Addy had always chided me for living only part time in the
real world, the rest of my time filled with flights of fantasy.
I disagreed. My approach had always been a conscious choice,
a matter of perspective. After all, what was so wonderful about reality?
Her answer: only in the real world would I find her.
I discovered too late how harsh my life would be without
her.
I’d slept poorly that night, my sleep disturbed by dreams,
but when I awoke well before dawn, my resolve remained. Though I’d sleepwalked
through my coming of age five years earlier, my circumstance had now changed,
replaced by a lingering sadness, a malaise that would not heal. I’d become
inclined to imagine another life elsewhere, desperate to try out an alternate path.
On this day, I intended to test the maelstrom.
The maelstrom appeared as a swirling circle of water for only
three days each year, starting at the equinox—an unusual anomaly that behaved in
a manner different from a proper whirlpool. This vortex hovered a foot above
the lake’s surface and, more bizarrely, stood vertical.
Townsfolk debated its purpose. The more rational claimed a
perturbation of light, like a prism, caused by sprays of seasonal runoff and
the angle of the sun. Others believed it to be magic, though none existed in
our world.
Of course, what we called magic might be nothing more than a
label for things beyond the boundaries of reason. Natural phenomenon might
still be magic. The sun’s rays lifted our spirits, and the advent of spring
lightened our hearts.
Each year, as the equinox approached, young boys who’d
reached their eighteenth year would boast about their intent to challenge the
maelstrom. In practice, few did. By eighteen, most had narrowed their path
through life, following the example of their elders, or rebelled and chosen a
contrarian course. With age, the lust for adventure diminished to bluster, tall
tales told to impress their younger peers.
Those who took the leap landed with a splash on the far side
to the derision of their mates, but rumors alleged one had vanished years ago as
villagers gaped, never to return. Philosophers speculated the swirling water
might be a gateway to the gods, but only for those with sufficient faith.
At eighteen, I would never have abandoned Addy, but once she
was gone, my desire for change stirred. While I lacked the required faith, this
was caused by the cruelty of the world, and did not reflect my belief in magic.
My desperation grew until, in the spring of my twenty-third year, I determined
to go.
I’d leave before sunup, guaranteeing solitude on the shore.
Should I stumble through the maelstrom to no effect, no one would witness my
folly. Still in a daze, I stowed provisions in my backpack: a day’s worth of
salted mutton, a loaf of hard bread, two dried apples, a full waterskin, a
knife, a flint, and a rain slicker to ward off the morning chill.
At the doorway of my Queen’s Hill cottage, I hesitated. This
morning’s excursion would likely be a fool’s errand, but what if it turned out
to be something more, a journey to who-knows-where? As I gazed down to the lake,
a sense of foreboding crept over me. No matter. Foolhardy or not, I was
committed.
I slipped across the threshold and navigated the switchbacks
in the dark.
The maelstrom hovered over the shallows a dozen paces
offshore, in the dim light showing as nothing more than a disturbance in the
air. I yanked off my boots, knotted the laces and slung them around my neck. As
I rolled my trousers above the knee, I cast a lingering glance up the hill to
catch a last glimpse of my cottage.
I waited until the eastern horizon reddened and waded into
the lake.
An arm’s length from the gateway, I reached out, keeping as
far away as possible while my fingertips brushed its surface. It felt like... nothing,
likely no more than an illusion. In half an hour, I’d be back in my bed, no
closer to comprehending the universe. Yet I’d yearned for a portal to another
world, one that might allow me to deviate from accepted norms. I longed to
float off to a fresher fate.
Once, I too would have followed the safe path, with no risk
of surprise, but then life did surprise me with a cosmic slap across the face
that left me shattered—the taking of Addy. At twenty-two, misfortune had cleared
the slate, leaving me alone and adrift.
I drew in a breath and plunged through.
In the light of pre-dawn, and in my half-awake state, no
difference struck me at first, other than the chill waters deeper than
expected, soaking the rolls of my trousers. Out of the mist on either side,
giant evergreens loomed graceful as usual, rising until their tops blurred. The
view so distracted me that several heartbeats passed before I realized the
change.
Perhaps I was still sleeping in my bed, for where the
channel to the west lake should have been, a broad flood plain spread. The
water had washed over the banks and crept inland for a hundred paces, leaving
the trees the only witness to what once had been dry land.
Beyond the trees, nothing.
Nowhere a dock or a mooring, not so much as a hint of early
morning smoke rising from a chimney. Nowhere the cottages of Queen’s Hill. Nowhere
houses at all. As I gaped, the edges of branches shimmered as if undecided
whether to remain intangible or become real. In a panic, I realized the folly
of this quest. Better to return to a safer, albeit gloomier life, to go back
through the portal at once.
Behind me, the maelstrom still swirled, a fleeting comfort
as it had started to recede. While I stared at the last link to my old world,
the orb diminished, shrunk to a size I could cover with my hand, and then to
that of the tip of my thumb. Before I sloshed more than two steps closer, it
winked out.
Now, to the north and the south, nothing showed but water. I
stumbled to shore, my movements causing the slightest wake in the surface,
which lay so still I could make out my astonished features in the reflection.
I’d spent much of my young life with Addy, like a mate
sailing across a forever lake. She’d been with me through calm and storm. I’d
yearned to find renewed hope on this side of the gateway and return home to a
new life, yet now the gateway, like Addy, had vanished.
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