DANCER: Book 5 of The Fifth Place

It seemed to him as though he were on some half-crumbled walkway down in the belly of the world. A gauntlet. On either side gargantuan creatures, almost but not quite motionless, stared down at him. Turning ever so slightly as he passed between them, their heads as big as houses, their bodies grey and dark, but for their eyes . . . like small burning moons, fixing on him. He saw them vividly in his brain, convincing himself he could see them by sight, too, though there was no sight to be had. They were after-images on his vision, as though those great ancient eyes had burned on him and then closed – yet only closed to his senses, for in truth they would not so much as blink. There was a bull, and a bison, their horns sprouting away from the heatless white glare of the eyes. A panther, a doyot, a dog with fangs the size of his body. Some monstrous reptilian thing standing tall. A taidan and a cinderwulf on opposite sides facing each other.

And a ghoum. A titan of one, some fell white god, as tall as the cavern but stooping so that its questing head neared his path. In absence of eyes it began to search with long fingered hands, lightly gripping the edges of the gauntlet, then probing, reaching for him. At any moment it would touch him, a foul fingertip like wet paper stroking the length of his body . . .

Description

‘We’ll die one way or another. Better to die with a smokin gun in my hand and blood on my knife.’

 

No more running.

Sick of being hunted, and faced with no other option that isn’t simply giving up, our group of antiheroes have decided to bring the fight to the enemy. No matter that they are only a few, damaged and chaotic, and the enemy is immeasurably vast, not to mention existing in another dimension, outside of space and time. The odds are absurd, but they must try.

But before they can even get to the Fifth Place, first they must find the Door that leads there. And that involves journeying far below the earth, through the dead subterranean city of Old Ghoum.

It is the stuff of nightmares, both of monsters and mental anguish. It will take everything they have to keep going – and retain the last shreds of their sanity.

 

The ending has an almost colossal sense of finality, while still managing to lay the scene for the next, penultimate, challenge. This is not an easy book to read at times, and demands much of its readers, but with that burden also comes extra weight and meaning to its final outcomes and consequences.

F.J. Blair, author of the Bulletproof Witch series

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