
Check out this incredible excerpt of Seal of Solomon by Golden Czermak! Releasing on August 29th, this PNR Adventure is a must read!

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Blurb:
WARNING: This book is for mature readers only. Not for children. It contains adult themes, violence, coarse language, sexual situations, nudity, and paranormal themes.
The Adventure Continues...
From author Golden Czermak, comes the second installment of the enthralling Journeyman Series.
With no answers and a weapon of mass destruction slung around his neck, Gage Crosse is left with little choice but to travel with Joey Mosely to New York, seeking aid from the Order Council itself. Little do they know that they are about to embark on what may be the greatest adventure of their lives: to find the mysterious Seal of Solomon.
Meanwhile, the fragile threads holding the demon army and its monstrous allies together are unraveling. Keli must act quickly to maintain her position as ruler, else have all their efforts fall into the flames of ruin.
Can the Journeymen keep the Seal of Solomon out of demon hands, or will the Noctis succeed in wrenching all three artifacts from their control?

Excerpt:
All the Way from Denver
The driving rain smashed against the fractured windshield of the
GMC quad cab as it raced down US 287, pavement whooshing by with a thunderous
roar. A set of dented fenders, splintered headlamps, and a shredded bumper lead
the way through the deluge; the old truck looked like it had been through hell
and back.
Which, as so happens, it had.
The escape from Denver was not easy, the terrible events there
weighing heavily on the driver’s mind. Grasping the steering wheel tightly with
both hands was a large man, topped with a bushy mop of black hair that matched
the stormy clouds and his bleak disposition. The tank top he wore fit tightly
over his substantial chest – tainted a rusty brown from deep gashes underneath
and also the fluids of many dark creatures that had gotten in his way. This man
was skilled at making sure they would not be bothering anyone ever again –
their lifeblood spread across the past five hundred miles.
A heaviness continued to bear down on Gage Crosse as he squinted
through the downpour with his weighty green eyes. Right then, it would be all
too easy to shut out the world and drift off to sleep, but he fought off the
urge to fully close them. He was used to battling all kinds of supernatural
creatures, but this time, things were different; their numbers were far more
extensive and wave after exhausting wave came at him, leaving barely a chance
to breathe.
There were things he was experienced within the hordes,
werewolves and demons being the mainstay, but amongst the rest were horrifying
creatures, so new they hadn’t been given names or entries in any lore book.
Yet, despite overwhelming odds, Gage had once again managed to pull through –
still alive, still breathing, and still able to feel emotions.
For the last hundred or so miles, the route had been clear of
any confrontations, though a pervading sense of dread hung overhead like the
dark and wet sky. He let out a sigh of relief, welcoming the respite no matter
how brief. Looking over his baby, the battered GMC was probably not going to
withstand many more attacks.
They know where you are going, Gage, a nagging voice whispered in the back of his mind. They’re
not just going to let you go.
As right as the voice may be, he tried to ignore it, focused
instead on staying steady while the wind whipped the cab from side to side. It
was still a challenge to see much of anything ahead, the windshield wipers
barely having any effect on the torrent. One thing was certain – their
incessant noise was contributing to a mounting headache with each
successive thump.
As the wipers continued beating, a sharpness arose at the back
of his neck. All too familiar, he reached around to tweak the spiked chain that
hung across it. This had been happening since he left Denver and it was growing
tiresome, the feeling coming and going at chance intervals.
Truth be known, what he really wanted at that moment was to be
behind the safe walls of the Lodge and off of this infernal highway. Hopefully
there, the effects he was experiencing would be diminished and, for damn sure,
no monsters would be lurking. Despite those wants, reality slapped him with a
cold, hard fact; the fulfillment of those desires remained over three and a
half hours away.
The silver amulet attached to the chain began to grow heavy,
dragging downward as if it were trying to cut its way clean through his neck.
He took a hand off the steering wheel, moving to adjust the chain.
As soon as the ends of his thick fingers touched the polished
metal disc, there was a flare and he was whisked away from the highway.
A tinny smell filled his nostrils and there in front of him was
the visage of a lifeless woman spread across mounds of debris in a once
splendid country kitchen. Her graceful brown hair was soaked through with
blood. It was Adrienne, his dearest, and although the scene was pure carnage, her
face maintained its beauty – still as wondrous and delightful as he remembered.
To him it looked as if she could have been sleeping peacefully amidst the
rubble… but he knew that she was not.
I am so sorry darlin’… he thought, lamenting over having to leave her body behind in
the collapsed ruins of his old home.
The image shifted, rippling to her in a ghostly form, rising up
from a vortex of shadows into the heavens. “Non Omnis Moriar,” she said
softly, disappearing into the blackness.
Then, as quickly as the vision had appeared, it was gone. Gage
was back in driver’s seat, still moving along with his heavy boot on the gas.
Not all of me shall die, Gage
said in a low voice as the rain seemed to diminish. That motto, inked across
the top of his back, had carried him through the darkest of times, and this was
no exception. I’ll always remember you, Ady. Your memory will live on…
still bright. He brought his hand to his chest and lightly tapped the
middle.
He allowed his mind to wander a bit since he could now look out
through the light sheets of drizzle and the truck continued down the flat green
countryside for another lengthy stretch.
A depressing thought dashed in. How am I going to break
this to Joey?
Adrienne and he were like siblings, knowing each other for at
least a year before Gage ever came into the picture. Although Gage had no
brothers or sisters of his own, he knew that Joey would take the news very hard
and could relate wholeheartedly to the feeling of loss.
“Goddammit!” he shouted crossly, slamming the horn with the edge
of his palm. This life did nothing but bring pain everywhere with it: one
happy-go-lucky thing replaced by five unhappy-go-to-shit ones.
Gage crumpled his brow as he thought about his own relationship
with Joey. How was this going to change their dynamic? Would it? Should it?
While those were certainly questions that had built up, he didn't yet know if
he could, or even wanted to, answer them.
Instead of harping on it, Gage decided on a different form of
remedy, one that had worked many times in the past.
He reached over to the radio, flicked it on, and selected his
favorite track on the mix CD that was permanently loaded in the player. Track
number seven began to play, the music of Dream On filling the
cab, and he was left to think on old times… normal times, before the paranormal
came in and made his life anything but super.
Eventually US 287 transitioned to I-45 outside Alma, Texas. Fort
Worth and Dallas had disappeared well beyond the receding landscape. The
musical escapism continued and before he knew it, Gage was passing by
Huntsville, Texas.
The Lodge was now just over an hour south, but as the nagging
voice indicated to him earlier, his pursuers were not going to just let him go.
Of course, that’s when the drive suddenly took a turn for the worse.
The panorama grew dark again, as if someone had cranked down a
global dimmer switch. Gage looked skyward, noticing there were no more clouds
than before, so he diligently prepped himself for another encounter. This shit
was not going to keep him from his destination. He cleared his head of excess
baggage and the grip he had on the wheel tightened. He could have navigated his
way back to the Lodge using his veins as a map since they were sticking so far
out from his arms.
The way ahead went black, a dark figure appearing in front of
the truck. Gage slammed hard on the brakes, fishtailing on the slippery road.
Turning nimbly into the swerves, he managed to right himself before coming to a
screeching halt. Gage searched frantically, but the being was nowhere to be
seen.
“What the fuck?” he blurted, looking down the empty freeway.
With chills, he recognized the shadowy form from his brief but defining
encounter with it back in early 2014. It was Death. “What’re ya doing here,
Skeletor?” Gage probed. Despite the big man’s lack of fear, Death’s presence,
especially now, was particularly disturbing to him.
A loud thud came from the truck bed and Gage
shot a glance in the rearview, expecting to see a pair of shriveled hands
coming at him. What he saw was no less dangerous: a heavyset man had leapt into
the bed, his eyes pitch black, rimmed with crimson.
“Another one of you damn red eyed freaks?” Gage grumbled. He
floored the gas, using the demon’s size against him. The chubby man fell onto
his ass, rolling toward the back like a huge ball. His rotund body struck
against the tailgate with a mighty boom and it came right off,
sending a shower of sparks into the air as they both careened into the grassy
median, smashing hard against the dividing barricade.
“Well, fuck my life!” Gage shouted at the empty spot where the
tailgate had been, speeding up to put some distance between him and the demon
paste. “Sorry old girl!”
Another loud noise came from ahead, the tall shape of a werewolf
landing squarely on the hood.
“I swear, if a damn bloodsucker shows up to complete this trio,
I’m officially retiring,” Gage jeered, grabbing his choice pistol from its
resting spot beside him.
The wolf man rose, anchoring the claws of both feet and one arm
into the thin metal, using the other to strike the windshield as he howled. The
window spider-webbed across the entire thing; Gage couldn't see anything at
all.
“Dammit!” he shouted, pointing the gun forward with a long
exhale. “I promise to get ya fixed up after.” He pulled the trigger several
times and the safety glass shattered, pelting the giant dog with a harmless
crystalline shower.
Now with a clear shot, he aimed again and fired, the silver
bullet racing straight between the wolf’s eyes.
Without warning, a cloud of shadow swooped in and swiftly
encased the wolf like a barrier. Gage thought he saw a monstrous lion’s head
amidst the smoke and watched as the wisps of vapor were sucked into the wolf’s
body.
“Well shit, this is a first!” he said, letting loose with the
remains of the silver bullets.
The wolf flung its eyes open as the bullets struck; they had
shifted from penetrating yellow to black and red. Silver had lost its
effectiveness and with renewed vigor, the werewolf swiped at Gage. Its claws
narrowly missed as he ducked out of the way.
“A demon possessed werewolf… great,” Gage grumbled as he laid
low with his face pressed against the seat. “Don’t you Noctis know how to play
by the rules?”
The truck veered as he drove for a bit without looking,
ejecting the spent clip onto the floor mat. It clinked against a collection of
other empties that had grown around his feet like metallic weeds. Reaching into
the ammo rack mounted under the dash, where the last of the clips were stored,
he took a tan colored one. The magazine was filled with a dozen iron bullets,
his only hope against the demon-wolf.
Before he could load it, the vehicle swerved sharply to the
left. Yanking the wheel in the opposite direction, Gage glanced up to see the
werewolf had a tight hold of it.
Hell no! he
thought, rising up in the seat menacingly.
“Crosse! Prepare to die!” the beast snarled, wrenching the wheel
back over toward the median. The truck left the pavement and tore into the
grass. Metal barriers whooshed by, grating against the sides of the GMC and
stripping away its brown and white paint.
Gage choked. “Nobody drives this truck but me,” he said boldly,
grabbing the clawed hand with his own. Slowly, he unwrapped each of the coarse
fingers and squeezed them tightly, bending them back until he could both hear
and feel a snap. They did so satisfyingly and the corner of Gage’s mouth turned
up as he steered the truck back into a lane.
The monster groaned in pain, but did not topple, still locked in
sturdily by the anchors he had made. Wasting no time, he lashed back at Gage.
Seeing the oncoming talons, Gage’s smirk evaporated as he dodged
them again. The brute missed, though a few loose strands of Gage’s hair were
sliced right off the top. The driver’s seat ended up catching the brunt of the
attack – shreds of fabric floated by as Gage loaded the new clip into the
custom MK-23.
The click it made was so reassuring, but the
racket that followed wasn’t. The sounds of metal being punctured reached his
ears, the enemy taking meticulous steps toward the cab. There Gage wouldn’t
stand much of a chance in the tight space.
Not about to let himself become dog chow, he sat up confidently
with the backing of his loaded weapon. “That ain't gonna happen, fucker.”
Seven bullets, dull and ferrous, leapt from the barrel, making
their way into the beast. Most struck hard in the center of his chest, while a
couple entered his anchor arm, spreading a raging pain like fire. Three more
bullets arrived, forcing him down to his belly like a snake. He held on tight
to the detaching hood, determined not to fall and become a smear on the
whizzing pavement.
“Gah!” Gage yelled. “Stubborn son of a bitch! The edge is right…
there… would be nice of ya to USE IT!”
Arm over arm the werewolf pulled itself across sharp, flayed
edges. Streams of dark blood were left behind, contrasting against the bright
white paint.
Gage had long grown tired of this fool and just wanted him gone,
so he aimed and almost pulled the trigger again. But he resisted. With
only two bullets left, there wasn’t much room for error. So, despite the urge
to simply let loose, he chose to stay still and do nothing. That would bide
time to make sure these bullets counted.
The werewolf continued to claw his way to the window, the outer
edge of the frame bending beneath his hands.
Closer…
Gage glanced down to check the pistol hidden in his lap, then
returned to staring down the monster.
Closer…
The monster grasped at the wheel, dragging his weighty body into
the cab. His snout was mere inches from the tip of Gage’s nose and each breath
was hot and sticky with spit, reeking with the smell of rancid eggs.
Resisting the urge to hurl what little fluid he had left, Gage
brought up his pistol and set it right against the creature’s temple. His hand
was as steady as a rock and his confidence pegged on high.
“I believe this is checkmate, Fido,” he whispered as he popped
off a couple pieces of hot iron into the wolf’s skull.
“No… this is,” the werewolf replied, tearing the steering wheel
from its column with his last bit of strength. Deed done, he pushed himself out
then listed, falling from the edge of the hood. His body hit the rushing
pavement and rolled underneath the rear tires with a grotesque crunch.
The truck lurched and barreled off the highway. Gage couldn’t
steer, now riding a bullet himself. Fastening his seatbelt, he tried to slam on
the brakes but it was too late, the barrier coming up fast before all went
dark…
***
The gentle rhythm of rain had returned and wreckage of the GMC
was hard-pressed into the barricade. The sprinkling water thinned the blood
stains into a light pink runoff which was pooling underneath the inoperable
vehicle. The front end was obliterated steel, far beyond repair, yet three of
the four tires were still in decent order. However, the last one hung from a
busted rim like an inner tube wrapped around an alloy taco shell.
Despite her battered appearance, most of the GMC could possibly
be salvaged. Which was more than could be said of Gage. He was slumped over in
his seat, eyes loosely closed. No breaths came from his open mouth, nor rise or
fall from his large chest. In fact, there was no movement at all except for the
steady flow of tepid blood from his body.
The situation was grim and that is when he reappeared.
Death hovered over the median, dark, graceful, and menacing.
Holding a long pole of gnarled mahogany, his robes caught the wind and the
tattered black fabric moved like snakes, yet slowly as if underwater.
It grew frigid and the sheets of rain transformed into hail as
he made his way toward the crash site. Releasing the staff, it hung in the air
for a second before vanishing in a wisp of shade. The grass froze, pummeled by
the falling chunks of ice, leaving a cracked trail in his wake.
Back on the highway, traffic had gotten heavier, but zoomed by
as if nothing was out of the ordinary – unable to see the disastrous wreckage
between the north and south bound lanes.
Reaching the driver’s side, Death glared ominously at Gage’s
motionless face. There was glimmer below his large black hood, as if eyes
underneath had caught a stray flicker from a distant candle.
Whispers then came, skimming on the breeze from all directions.
A cacophony of a thousand voices speaking in unison, all addressing one man.
Amidst the clamor, the Reaper lifted one of his skinless hands
and extended it into the cab. A lean finger, dusty and splintered, rose to
point at Gage, hovering just above his temple. “Gage… Crosse…” Death spoke, his
hollow voice rising above the discordance of the others. “There is much left
for you to do, man who does not fear death.”
With dagger-like quickness, the trembling finger was thrust deep
into his skull, penetrating the bone with ease. Gage convulsed in the seat,
belching up ungodly amounts of fluid.
“Rise...”
Abruptly, the hail became rain once again, the grass soft and
fertile. Death was gone and with a painful, dry gasp, Gage awoke.

Make sure you're all caught up with Homeward Bound! OUT NOW!

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Blurb:
WARNING: This book is for mature readers only. Not for children. It contains adult themes, violence, coarse language, sexual situations, nudity, and paranormal themes.
The entire world is on the brink of finding out nightmares are real.
An army of demons known as the Noctis is growing in strength.They control all manner of foul beasts and if not stopped soon, cities will burn, lives will end, and hope will be lost.
The only thing standing in the way are the Journeymen; humans and supernatural beings united against the darkness.
There is one known amongst men and the supernatural alike that you don’t mess with.
Unless it’s on his terms.
His name is Gage Crosse and he's the best damn Journeyman around.
These are his adventures.

About the Author:
In the beginning, Golden worked the standard corporate rat race, completed college for a Chemical Engineering Degree, and began a small photography company on the side.
Since then, and the growth of the FuriousFotog brand, Golden became an internationally published modeling/fitness photographer and eventually began working as a book cover model.
Having been in the industry for at least four years, he has interfaced and networked with countless authors and other clients. As part of his work as a photographer, he worked with them to create book cover images - now numbering well over 250 at the beginning of 2016.
Learning the ins and out of the book world, along with being an avid reader and storyteller himself, Golden finally decided to write and publish his first book, Homeward Bound, in 2016. This paranormal adventure romance will span a total of six books and new ideas for other stories are in the works as well.
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