Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Book Tour + #Giveaway: Legion Series By K.C. Finn @humblequill @SDSXXTours
Legion
Lost
By
K.C. Finn
Genre:
Dystopian
One
Underground girl escapes from a soldiers’ raid. Lost and above
ground for the very first time, she has only one option to secure her
survival: the Legion—a government organization for teenagers with
no place left to run. Leave your identity at the gate, and join a
life of military service until you reach adulthood. It sounds ideal,
but the Underground girl knows that the System won’t stop looking
for its female runaway. So, she tells a lie about her gender.
And
it will change her forever.
Posing
as Raja, a boy-soldier, the Underground girl is thrown into Legion
life at its full, brutal speed. Here, she meets Senior Commander
Briggs, whose savage authority reigns over the teenage soldiers.
Amongst them are a band of oddballs known as the South Tower Rejects,
led by Stirling, a tall, savvy stranger with bright copper hair and
eyes that shine like oceans. There’s something hiding behind his
cocky smile, and Raja wants to know what it is.
Excerpt
from Legion Lost:
“Little
boy, if you think I’m not going to notice how incompetent you are, just because
you’re next to her, then think again.”
He
thinks I’m cowardly now too—a very promising sign. When the commander runs
through the process of how to load our automatic guns, I ask him to stop and
repeat even the simplest parts of the instructions. I can see the strain in his
steely eyes, like he’s resisting the urge to just get up and smack me for
interrupting him. On the outside, the others are still looking at me like I’m
defective in some way, but, on the inside, I’m starting to enjoy winding Briggs
up by playing the fool.
We
have limited time to practise setting up the guns in our pairs. The bruised
girl is surprisingly good at locking the pieces into the right places, and I
learn more from watching her than I did from Briggs’s brisk display.
“What’s
your name?” I ask her, once I’m sure the commander is busy helping someone
else.
“Lucrece,”
she replies.
I
am taken aback by the broken quality to her voice. She sounds as though someone
has forced her to gargle with glass.
“I’m
Raja,” I tell her, and she lets that little smile slip out again.
“You’re
all right, Raja,” Lucrece says. “The first friendly-looking face I’ve seen
around here. Pity friendly isn’t in Briggs’s
assessment criteria.”
Lucrece
is a remarkably intelligent girl. Though her hands shake with nerves, she
understands the mechanics of the gun far better than I do, and she explains the
principles of distance, perception, and air resistance with confidence. From
her, I learn that the guns have two settings: single shot and continuous fire.
She finds the switch to change between the modes with ease. It pleases me to
know that she has so much skill, but a little part of me is sad when I realise
that she won’t be coming to the South Tower with me after all. Once today is
over, we might never speak to one another again.
“Time’s
up,” Briggs snarls. “You, you, and you, with me up here.”
Lucrece
is one of the three people that Briggs’s pointing finger finds. She hands me
her gun and stumbles nervously to the commander’s side with the two tall boys
the commander has picked. Briggs uncovers something huge and lumpy from beside
the gun stores, throwing it at Lucrece. She misses the catch as the heavy
object thumps her hard in the chest, but when she manages to lift it again, the
object takes shape. It is a thick, padded jacket, which appears to be full of
small, frayed holes.
“Put
these on,” Briggs barks, handing a jacket to each of the boys too, “and go and
stand in front of the targets.”
He
can’t be doing what I think he’s doing, and yet I watch in horror as Lucrece
pads up and walks a few metres away. She heads toward the spiral-shaped targets
that I’d assumed we would be aiming at. Briggs gives the three teens a shout
when he’s satisfied with their distance, then turns back to us with a
self-satisfied smirk.
“Set
your weapons to fire single shots,” he instructs. “Let’s make some holes in
those dummies, recruits.”
They
aren’t dummies. They’re people. Real people. My fellow soldiers are adjusting
their guns, but I can’t stand to even touch mine now.
“What
if we miss, sir?” I interject. “We could kill them.”
Briggs
leans close to my face, his bared teeth glowing white against his dark lips.
“You’d
better not miss then, had you son?” he purrs.
Legion
Found
The
heart-wrenching sequel to Kindle Press's LEGION LOST has arrived. As
our heroine Raja suffers with intense grief, her new identity as a
Highland rebel soldier is about to be put to the test. As part of an
intrepid rescue mission, she and her fellow Highlanders will travel
south to infiltrate the System itself, discovering the fresh horrors
that Governor Prudell has subjected her people to. Death, destruction
and all-out war awaits, and nothing can prepare them for the terror
of the truth.
Excerpt
from Legion Found:
“Whoa,”
says a voice near the doorway to the chamber.
It
takes me a moment to break the glare that Sun and I are sharing, but the sight
of Goddie and Apryl is a welcome relief when I spot them entering the room.
Apryl has a small bag of provisions which she hands me, and I sling it over my
shoulder as my gaze rests on Goddie. He’s looking me over, his mouth open a
little.
“I
know. Don’t say it,” I tell him. “I look ridiculous.”
“No,”
Goddie says gently. “I mean... ya don’t look like you, dat’s for sure. But ya
look... good. Okay.”
“Wow,”
Apryl adds dryly. “That was charming. You’re just full of backhanded
compliments today.”
“I,”
Goddie begins at once, wincing at me apologetically. “No, I don’t mean dat, I
mean... Oh hell, ya know what I mean, right?”
“Seldom
if ever,” I tell him.
But
really, I do know. I must look different, so radically different from normal.
And yet this is how I was supposed to turn out, I presume. Mumma’s little girl.
Long hair and dresses. Pretty as a picture.
“So
long as it gets me in and out unnoticed,” I add quickly, feeling the redness in
my cheeks. “As soon as we know where Dad is, we can make a move.”
“Kip’s
waiting for you on the surface,” Apryl tells me with a nod. “He’s going to tail
you both back to the walls in case there’s any trouble. But I want you to take
this.”
She
reaches into her pocket, then forces something small and cold into my hand.
It’s a brooch, apparently made of gold, and it has a black stone set in the
centre that glistens a little strangely. The circular piece of jewellery has a
pin on the back for it to be secured on clothing. When I don’t do anything with
the brooch except stare at it, Apryl huffs and then takes it back. I watch her
pinning it to one side of my dress, a little to the right of my heart.
“What’s
that?” Sun asks sharply, eyeing the brooch.
“A
camera,” Apryl explains. “Delilah and I rigged it up back at the base. Direct
feed back to our computers and tablets here.”
“We’ll
see everything you do,” Delilah adds.
When
I glance towards her, I realise she’s looking directly at Sun Lin. Sun, for her
part, seems to pale a little at the eyes on her, but soon she shrugs the
comment off in that haughty way of hers.
“Enjoy
the show,” she says with a curling smile.
K.
C. Finn was born and raised in Cardiff, South Wales, where her love
for storytelling grew at a precociously young age. After developing
the medical condition M.E. / C.F.S., Kim turned to writing to escape
the pressures of disabled living, only to become hooked on the
incredible world of publishing.
Kim
spends most of her time locked in the writing cave with an obscenely
large mug of tea. When not writing, she can be found pursuing her PhD
in Linguistics, watching classic British comedy, or concocting evil
schemes in the secret laboratory in her attic.
Website * Facebook * Twitter * Goodreads * Amazon
***From
February 17th to 23rd, my fantasy novel The Book Of Shade will be 99
cents, a 78% discount on the usual Kindle price.***
Buy it on Amazon!
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