Island Conspiracy, Chapter 0: Part 1: Gifts and Conflicts
novel, fantasy, young adult
Published on:
April 8, 12:46amWord Count:
5876Last Edited:
May 18, 2:33amWork Description
Three kids with "gifts" achieve a victory over a Dark Queen by making new friends and trusting the old ones. A story about friendship, loyalty, light romance, war between magical nations. A young-adult fantasy.
Chapter Description
Intro to Suviana and Ariza. Suviana gets several surprises. Raiders attack. Arrio comes and Ariza is reunited with Kell...
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bit at our faces, a definite improvement from the previous
day. The clearing in which our camp was built was littered
with fallen branches from the night’s bitter bluster. A few
mothers were gathering roots and herbs at the edge of the forest,
occasionally casting a wary eye back at their
tents.
Upon seeing Ezrin, they waved or smiled, calling out greetings to the chief. He returned the acknowledgments promptly before heading for one tent. I trailed behind a little, changing my mind halfway to the tent. Ezrin’s business in the healer’s home was not mine, and there was something nagging at my mind like a fly. I turned instead to my own tent, where my sister Ariza still slept.
Unfastening the tied tent flap, I stepped in and knotted the doorway closed again. Ariza’s slumbering figure lay curled tightly under her blankets. I packed a bag of clothing, provisions, small weapons, and medical supplies. I knew that Ezrin was wrong about my responsibilities.
I woke my sister gently, shaking her shoulder and saying her name. Ariza groaned, then opened her eyes and sat up.
“Morning already?” she asked.
“Yes, and we need to move quickly. Get dressed and gather your traveling things, we may not return here,” was my reply.
Ariza looked surprised at this, but dressed quickly. Over her tunic, she donned a leather belt with several dagger sheathes and pouches.
“Just a moment,” she said.
Ariza knelt down, and felt around the floor of the tent. She put her other hand on the ground, and within seconds had unbuckled a silver clasp and pulled back a section of the material. A black wooden door was underneath. She produced a small key from the inside of her belt and fit it into the lock set in the door. It popped open with a faint click to reveal a small dugout cavern. My surprise was enormous, and I let it dominate my face. What was this new secret?
A rope ladder dangled from the inside edge; Ariza tugged on it, then put her foot on one of the rungs. She gestured for me to follow her. Once we had fully descended, I simply gawked at the room. The walls were slightly damp, and it was very moist in the cavern. Roots poked through the ceiling, outside of a plain circle that must have been the tent. Plants grew on a table in one corner: vines with shimmery purple flowers, low-lying succulents, rare thorn-plants with red blossoms, and all manner that I could not begin to describe. Ariza led me to a wall of shelves.
Occupying the one of the middle shelves was a collection of individually wrapped knives, a few thin booklets of bound leaves, and a clear phial of liquid sapphire in color. On another smaller shelf, there were several rings wrought of gold and silver, inlaid with precious gems and stones. Ariza picked up a few of the knives, inspected them in the light, and tested their edges against a strip of leather. She took the ones that gleamed and cut the leather with ease, and wedged them into sheathes. She also selected one of the light booklets, and the bottle of fluid was wrapped in wool and grass binding before tucked into a large rucksack.
An array of scrolls sat on yet another ledge, next to an assortment of dowels. Each rod varied greatly in size, mostly between 3 inches to 18 inches long and a thin one-eighth inch to a broad 5 inches in diameter. All of them were engraved with the same curious rune, and glowed faintly. I watched as Ariza looked the rods over, then picked out a spindly but short one, a slightly thicker and medium-length one, and a several-inch wide, foot long one. She wrapped the slimmer two in a similar binding as the phial of blue liquid, and placed all three in her bag. Ariza picked up the pile of scrolls and rifled through them. A few were taken out, rolled tightly and tied, and set in the knapsack.
In a corner, a set of cauldrons simmered
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*** The visuals in this story are well written, I could see clearly what and where the characters were doing. I was confused however as to the time or era that the story takes place. You gave subtle hints as far as the characters themselves. I wanted to know more about them, their history for example, maybe even a brief description. I could surmise some of their character by your dialogue. This story has the potential to be a really great novel one that I would gladly add to my collection of books in my own personal library. Try reading the story to yourself, but slowly that way you can catch even mistakes I didn't. You are your own best critic... You are off to a wonderful start and I look forward to reading more...you have succeeded in adding another fan to your list! Write on...***
Right--so first, I'd like to say...hooray! It's really
good, Fainne. I was trying to read the first chapter and prologue
last night, but didn't get too far before I had to go to sleep
(long day). But hey-morning now, and I'm wide awake and loving
this! However, I would like to say that of all that I've read
(chapter 1 and the prologue), I liked the prologue better. I felt
that you were better able to peak my interest in it. That being
said, this chapter was pretty good, too. I was confused at the very
begining, with all of them in the tent, but I guess that's what
happens when you jump into reading something that's already moving
at a fast pace.
I liked the whole secret-chamber-under-the-tent
thing. When you're describing their surroundings, though, I'd like
to recommend to think 3-dimensional: floor, walls, ceilings. I saw
lots of descriptive writing about the walls and the
shelves--the antler hooks thing was a great example--but
not much about the floor or the ceiling. Was it made of earth?
If so, was the ground (or ceiling, even) damp? Cool? Could
Suviana see the ends of plant roots in the ceilings? I
think if you incorportate these sorts of descriptions--without
over-doing it, of course--you'd have a really nice setting going
on. I completely agree with what everyone else has said in
their critiques of this, too, by the way. Another thing, too--when
Ariza was saying words like "mir" and "kima", I noticed that
you didn't start new paragraphs or use speech tags or anything,
like "Ariza said..." and so on. I found this a bit confusing, but
after I passed "mir" and got to "kuma", it made more sense. I
think, as a grammatical thing, you might want to change that up.
Great, great job, though! If I'm not super tired again later today,
I'll read chapter 2 and critique. ![]()
hello fainne, i can see that you have a well-developed idea for this novel, but i have some suggestions. I can also se that i am a fantasy writer like you, and would greatly appreciate if you could critique my works when they come out.
i once again must say that i like the overall idea. no potential problems that i can see, and am interested to read more! the plot so far is believable and real; the intricacy and detail is very obvious.
i like the pace and speed of the story, the action is quick to come. also, the time when the characters are not in conflict or are resting is still interesting. it doesnt bore the reader, but rather gives them more of an idea of exactly what is happening on the side.
i love the descriptions!!!!
you do a great
job of balancing the information with detail and action,
which is definitely a hard thing to achieve. well done on keeping
back from infodumping but providing enough description so the
reader has a clear idea of what everything looks like. great
job!!!
i like the third person angle, but i think that it might help a little to do a first person version. maybe you could switch the POV back and forth between the MC's? that might be an interesting deal.
the characters were alive in my mind for the most part, but a little more elaboration on their feelings would not hurt. i think it really helps to have Suviana in the dark about Ariza's little secret; it gives an impression of Ariza's independence.
the dialog never sounded forced, and it was always natural for the characters to say what they did. you have a gift for making characters speak m'dear!
grammar and spelling were good, i could see no , mistakes except: when the character in the beginning are talking about this war, i think that a few of the "our side" s should be changed to 'we' and 'us'
read aloud to yourself and see if you can catch my meaning
keep up the great work! i am very interested to see where this is going, and i especially enjoyed it because of my love for fantasy.
~Fyrenne



It is good to see you attempting a long piece Fainne.
I can tell that you have a rich imagination and a well-spring of ideas that you have drawn upon to build this world and populate it with characters.
I have to be honest though, I am confused at to what’s going on.
The prologue holds up well enough. I can understand that somewhere, someone wants something from the woman named Kinana. He already has it though and presumably kills her.
That part I can follow. What come next raises the questions. It jumps to a scene in a village at night. There is a woman and she is outraged as to what’s happening, there is mention of a war, and of some children who are important and related ot the people talking.
Later on when we learn that Ariza has a “gift” I wonder, is this one of the children the others were talking about?
This opening chapter of a longer work does do a good job of raising a lot of questions. Who are these children, what gifts do they have, what significant do they hold. All these things are good. It gets the readers mind going. I feel though, that there isn’t enough information about the setting and the world situation. I can understand that the things they are talking about are important to them, but why are they important to me, the reader? Give us some more information about that and I think this chapter will be all the more enjoyable to read.
Keep up the good work!