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SEVENTEEN SERIES SHORT STORIES 1-6 (EBOOK BUNDLE)

SEVENTEEN SERIES SHORT STORIES 1-6 (EBOOK BUNDLE)

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*includes a digitally signed author note in each book*

EBOOK BUNDLE. SEVENTEEN SERIES SHORT STORIES 1-6. 

This collection includes all six short stories in the adrenaline-fueled, action-packed, award-winning thriller series Seventeen.

First Death

Discover where it all started…

Dancing Blades

Join Lucas Soul on his quest to become a warrior.

The Meeting

Discover the origins of the incredible friendship that defines Hunted.

The Warrior Monk

Experience Warrior from the eyes of one of the most loved characters in Seventeen…

The Hunger

Discover the origin of the love story behind Empire.

The Bank Job

Join two of the protagonists of Legacy on their very first adventure.


FAQS: HOW WILL I GET MY EBOOKS?

Ebooks are delivered instantly by links in an email from our delivery partner Bookfunnel, to the email address you used at checkout.

FAQS: HOW DO I READ MY EBOOKS?

You can read your ebooks online, in the free Bookfunnel app, or download them to your Kindle, iPhone, Android, Nook, or Kobo device.

SYNOPSIS

First Death

1570. Carpathian Mountains, Moldavia.

Ten-year-old Lucas’s life is a simple but happy one. All
that changes when the Hunters finally track down his whereabouts.

Forced to bear witness to horrific scenes that forever
shatter his innocence, he discovers the shocking secret behind his less than
ordinary existence. What follows is a fight for survival that will define the
nature of a boy bound to an incredible destiny whose origins have been lost to
the tides of time. 

Dancing Blades

1624. Edo period. Japan.

When hunted half-breed immortal Lucas Soul hears tales of legendary samurai Musashi Miyamoto during his travels in the Far East, he sails to Japan to meet the great man and convince him to take him on as an
apprentice.

Musashi refuses to agree to his request, leaving Soul with no option but to shadow the samurai and repeatedly challenge him to duel, in
the hope of proving his worth. But things takes a sinister turn when Soul stumbles upon a plot that threatens the life of Musashi’s son.

Can the immortal rescue the young man in time and change the master’s mind? 

The Meeting

On a hot summer’s day in Boston, US Marine turned Homicide Detective Reid Halsey finds himself in the middle of a deadly shootout with a
murder suspect.

When Lucas Soul, a seemingly innocent victim, rises from the dead moments after a fatal gunshot wound to the head, Reid comes to the shocking realization that the world he believes in may very well be a carefully
fabricated lie masking an unearthly reality.

The Warrior Monk

The Order of the Three Spears. Founded at the turn of the ninth century by the Lotus-Born Second Buddha and inspired by the most powerful immortal warrior who ever lived, this secret buddhist society has kept the existence of immortals hidden from ordinary humans and maintained peace between the races for twelve hundred years.

When news of an ancient enemy reaches them from the West, the Order sends its best and most unorthodox field agent to investigate.

In the course of his mission, Brother Yonten crosses paths with an immortal operative also tasked with hunting the Order’s deadly opponent. The astounding truths he uncovers will determine not just his own fate, but that of the immortal societies and the entire human race.

The Hunger

1695. Spanish Netherlands.

The war between King Louis XIV and the League of Augsberg
reaches a pivotal moment at the Siege of Namur.

When the besieged French army starts to mount an increasingly
fierce resistance, Bastian immortal Conrad Greene and his company of elite
intelligence operatives are sent to Liège to track down the traitor supplying
the enemy with stocks of a new, powerful gunpowder.

Frustrated at every turn, an unexpected visit from Conrad’s
superior results in a surprising addition to his team. Can the captain resist
his all-consuming attraction for immortal Laura Hartwell long enough to solve
the mystery of the gunpowder plot?

The Bank Job

1917. Chicago.

When
internationally-renowned thief and Crovir immortal Howard Titus hears of a
hoard of gold and cash about to land in the vault of the First Chicago Bank, he
has only one thought in mind.

Getting
his hands on the dough.

On the
night he breaks into the bank to carry out his carefully-laid plan, the Crovir
thief comes face to face with a man who challenges everything he thought he
knew about the immortal races and all his plans for his future.

READING ORDER

SEVENTEEN NOVELS & SHORT STORIES
Hunted (Book 1)
First Death (Short Story 1)
Dancing Blades (Short Story 2)
The Meeting (Short Story 3)
Warrior (Book 2)
The Warrior Monk (Short Story 4)
Empire (Book 3)
The Hunger (Short Story 5)
Legacy (Book 4)
The Bank Job (Short Story 6)
Origins (Book 5)
Destiny (Book 6)

READ A SAMPLE

1570. Carpathian Mountains, Moldavia.

The shadows of the hunters danced between the trees, their forms at times insubstantial amongst the white flakes falling silently from the overcast night sky. 


The boy knew all too well the deadly nature of the shapes chasing him through the forest. Blood pounded in his skull as he ran, the desperate thrum matching the cadence of his feet striking the snow covered ground. His breaths sounded unnaturally loud in his ears and masked the sounds of his pursuers. The sweat soaking his back had turned to icy trails, and frost crusted his eyes and nose. He ignored the stitch in his side, wiped at his face, and squinted at the dark landscape unfolding before him. 


There was movement out the corner of his eye. 


His heart stuttered in his chest as he spotted a gray shape. He looked around and counted four more monstrous forms closing in on him.



 * * *



The spear carved the air with a silken sound. The boy watched breathlessly as it sliced through the water and impaled a fat trout. A sliver of blood flowed down the shaft of the weapon when the man lifted it from the river. The fish twisted and arched around the blade, its body glistening in the sunlight as it sought to escape. Its desperate twitches slowly stilled.


The man turned and smiled. ‘Your turn, son.’


The boy gripped his own spear with white-knuckled fingers. He stepped into the shallows and stared at the turbulent surface. 


‘Remember, let your eyes guide your hand,’ his father said quietly behind him.


The boy let his vision unfocus until the river became a gray backdrop. An expectant hush fell around him, as if the world was holding its breath. He was wondering whether his father experienced the same feeling of detachment during a hunt when silver suddenly flashed to his left. His arm moved of its own volition. 


The spear slipped into the water and found its prey. 


The boy gaped. ‘I did it. Father, I did it!’ 


He lifted the weapon and gazed proudly at the trout thrashing around on its sharp tip. 


His father kissed his head and ruffled his hair. ‘Well done, son. We shall have a nice supper this eve.’ 


The boy’s father placed their catch in an oilskin bag and cleaned the weapons in the rapids while the boy hoisted the fishing cage sitting on the bank into his arms. Freshwater mussels rattled around the bottom. He turned and followed his father into the forest. 


Giant evergreens rose around them as they trod the path their footsteps had carved into the land over the years. The branches of the trees were heavy with snow, their crowns almost invisible against the clear sky. Cones and needle-shaped leaves covered the ground and filled the air with the clean, fresh smell of sap. 


Winter had come early to the mountains this year. The days started to grow short and the nights long several weeks ago, much to the boy’s irritation.
He had had to wait until he was seven before his mother allowed him to accompany his father on his fishing and hunting trips. It wasn’t until this summer, when he turned ten, that he received his very first hunting knife and spear. Just when he had started to get used to the weapons, he had woken up to the year’s first snowfall. 


His father pointed out plants and creatures as they navigated the trail home. The boy listened attentively. However many times they travelled this way, he always learned something new and fascinating. His enthusiasm dipped slightly when he was made to recite his French verbs. He stumbled over some of the words. His father corrected him gently and made him start all over again. 


The boy did not begrudge this strict request. He knew his mind needed to be as strong as his body if he wanted to be even half the man his father was.


The smoky scent of burning wood reached them moments before the clearing appeared between the trees. A log cabin stood in the middle of the open circle of land. Although it wasn’t big, the building was of sturdy construct and had withstood nine harsh winters in the desolate and unforgiving Carpathian Mountains. 


The boy thought it was the best home that had ever existed in the whole wide world, especially since his father and mother had built it with their own hands when he was but a baby. 


His father hastened his pace. The boy fell in behind him. 


Seconds before they reached the porch, the front door opened and a woman stepped out. She had a large quilt in her hands and was using a stick to beat dust out of it. She paused and looked up at the sound of their footsteps.


‘Mother, I did it! I caught a fish!’ the boy shouted. He broke into a run and overtook his father.


A dazzling smile curved the woman’s lips and lit her sparkling blue eyes. ‘You did? Oh, that’s wonderful!’ 


His father dropped the oilskin bag, scaled the shallow steps to the stoop, and lifted the woman by her waist. The stick and the quilt thudded to the porch. She gripped his shoulders and laughed wildly as he spun her around. He finally stopped and held her against him. 


‘Hello, wife,’ he said softly, his gray eyes brimming with love.


‘Hello, husband.’ She lowered her head and kissed him. His arms tightened around her.


The boy grimaced. He had become accustomed to these displays over the years. Though he couldn’t for the life of him fathom why pressing one’s lips against another person’s could make two people so happy, it evidently did, judging by the number of times his parents engaged in the activity. 


He tolerated their passionate embrace for as long as he could before releasing a loud sigh. 


His father reluctantly broke the kiss and slowly lifted his head. ‘Our son is a villain intent on stopping our lovemaking,’ he muttered.


His mother wrinkled her nose. ‘I suspect you were the same at that age, love. Give it another five years. We will be beating females off him in droves.’


The boy listened to this conversation with an affronted air. ‘I shall never kiss a girl. They are soft and—and horrid!’


His father threw back his head and laughed. 


‘Oh.’ His mother’s eyes narrowed. ‘Are you calling me horrid?’ 


The boy opened and closed his mouth soundlessly.


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