In a world where lightning sustained the Roman Empire, and Egypt’s vampiric god-kings spread their influence through medicine and good weather, tiny Prytennia’s fortunes are rising with the ships that have made her undisputed ruler of the air.
But the peace of recent decades is under threat. Rome’s automaton-driven wealth is waning along with the New Republic’s supply of power crystals, while Sweden uses fear of Rome to add to her Protectorates. And Prytennia is under attack from the wind itself. Relentless daily blasts destroy crops, buildings, and lives, and neither the weather vampires nor Prytennia’s Trifold Goddess have been able to find a way to stop them.
With events so grand scouring the horizon, the deaths of Eiliff and Aedric Tenning raise little interest. The official verdict is accident: two careless automaton makers, killed by their own construct.
The Tenning children and Aedric’s sister, Arianne, know this cannot be true. Nothing will stop their search for what really happened.
Not even if, to follow the first clue, Aunt Arianne must sell herself to a vampire
France, under the rule of the Court of the Moon, is a country of
cyclical change, where the true rulers arrive every night to compete
among themselves, and humans are backdrop, witnesses, inessential – and
yet inextricably intertwined.
It is the reign of the Gilded Tower, and fashions are daring.
Two Wings: Griff Tenning has suffered too much change in the past
year, and wishes everything would quiet down for a while - or, better
still, would go back to when his parents were alive. But, even so, it’s
useful that his odd aunt can afford airship tickets to France. On such a
quick trip, his hated travel sickness won’t be enough to keep him from a
chance to stand beneath the impossible Towers of the Moon.
Forfeit: Forfeit is the newest game of the Court of the Moon, and
one seemingly designed for humans to lose. But Arianne Seaforth is
willing to pay a great deal to help her oldest friend – and she is
learning to extract a price of her own.
Death and the Moon: Eluned Tenning can barely remember all the names
of the vast network of cousins making her sixteenth birthday party so
overwhelming. But she has no problems with would-be actor Milo, who is
so calmly quiet and friendly. She’d never step on a stage herself, but
she’s happy to help him rehearse.