Mooneyes and the Dark Moon Council

Science Fiction & Fantasy, Fantasy
Cover of the book Mooneyes and the Dark Moon Council by I. L. Davis, AuthorHouse
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: I. L. Davis ISBN: 9781481724173
Publisher: AuthorHouse Publication: March 8, 2013
Imprint: AuthorHouse Language: English
Author: I. L. Davis
ISBN: 9781481724173
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication: March 8, 2013
Imprint: AuthorHouse
Language: English

It was said that the eyes of moon elves glowed with the light of their gods both during the day and the night. This was a blessing for the moon elves. However, Karuks eyes did not glow, for they were as black as night, and the elders had believed his heart would be just as dark. He was born bigger and stronger and with light-colored hair. The elders debated whether or not to take this young elf to the woods and leave him to die. This way the darkness within him would die with him. However, fate had its own plans, and the elves decided to raise the child within the camp in hopes that the darkness would fade from him and the blessing of the elves would fall on him before he became a man. That same night, Jimni and Dawgknight were born. Jimnis cub was a gray saber-toothed wolf with eyes that glowed green. He named the cub Emerald. Dawgknights cub was a saber-toothed tiger with fur as black as the darkest night and eyes that glowed light blue. He named his cub Soul. After they and their pets where trained, they began their brotherly competitions with each other. They competed so much that they even had a bet that the loser would have to name his firstborn son after the one who was knighted first.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

It was said that the eyes of moon elves glowed with the light of their gods both during the day and the night. This was a blessing for the moon elves. However, Karuks eyes did not glow, for they were as black as night, and the elders had believed his heart would be just as dark. He was born bigger and stronger and with light-colored hair. The elders debated whether or not to take this young elf to the woods and leave him to die. This way the darkness within him would die with him. However, fate had its own plans, and the elves decided to raise the child within the camp in hopes that the darkness would fade from him and the blessing of the elves would fall on him before he became a man. That same night, Jimni and Dawgknight were born. Jimnis cub was a gray saber-toothed wolf with eyes that glowed green. He named the cub Emerald. Dawgknights cub was a saber-toothed tiger with fur as black as the darkest night and eyes that glowed light blue. He named his cub Soul. After they and their pets where trained, they began their brotherly competitions with each other. They competed so much that they even had a bet that the loser would have to name his firstborn son after the one who was knighted first.

More books from AuthorHouse

Cover of the book Cedar Creek by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Present Move by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Gracie Hall-Hampton by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Fred T. Perris in Deseret by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Vermilion Dreams by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Mist of Love Fog of War by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book The Memories That We Leave Behind by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Breakthroughs by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Trials, Tragedy, Triumphs by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book The Case of the Missing Fingers by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book The 69 Tips to Pleasing Your Man by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Payback by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Merge 2.0 by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Unlikely Heroes of the Good News by I. L. Davis
Cover of the book Boys Become Men Through the Eyes of War by I. L. Davis
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy