Heroes in the Dust by Jennifer Macaire
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Time travel
Historical romance
Available in print
Novel
ISBN: 978-1-934614-12-9
Book II in the Iskander Series
Ashley, once a time traveling journalist, now the beloved wife of Alexander the Great, journeys to Bactria in the hopes that she may one day be reunited with her son Paul.
She knows Alexander is on the most dangerous and difficult part of his fight to recapture the crown of Persia. She loves her hero, but also feels melancholy because she knows when he will die and there is nothing she can do to change that.
Sequel to TIME FOR ALEXANDER and 2nd in the Iskander series. Alexander the Great's campaign against the mountain tribes is given a new kind of life, told from the viewpoint of a time traveling reporter who is married to Alexander. The innate humor of the author is rounded out with the personal triumphs and tragedies of the loving, appealing, sensual Ashley, who has made herself a new life and close friends 3,000 years in her past.
EPPIE FINALIST
"...This instalment sees the growing of Ashley into a loving woman and less of an ice maiden and the growing of Alexander from an enthusiastic youth to a more subdued man. The hero and legend prove themselves to be human after all as he suffers injuries and makes mistakes like everyone else. But at his side is Ashley who grows to love the man himself as opposed to the legend she had been fascinated with before her trip through time.
Another riveting instalment in this promising series."
~ Louisa Brown
The road was good, and we made the march to the summit in little over two weeks. The last four days were terrifying. Our food ran out, and the soldiers were forced to slaughter pack animals.
Alexander had been right. If we'd made it in fourteen days, it would have been perfect. Unfortunately, it took sixteen. Those two extra days for us would mean six days for the men in the back, and that was a week with no food. Alexander sent messengers back to stop the food from coming to the front of the line. Seeing how close we were to the top, he decided to cut off our supplies and press onwards. That meant that after our food ran out we would have no more until we reached the fertile valley below the pass.
Now began a race against time. Twenty thousand men, ten thousand horses, three hundred camels, five hundred mules, and one time-traveler made the march up the mountain in less than two days. We traveled eighty kilometers up a mountainside in less time, I thought, than it would have taken to drive a jeep. Each man who fell was loaded instantly onto a horse, each horse that fell was left behind to fend for itself until the second half of the army found it, and each donkey that fell was slaughtered and the meat eaten for dinner that night.
We walked from before dawn till after dusk, ate the last of our victuals, and slept wrapped in our cloaks with the warmth of other human bodies keeping us alive.
As they walked, soldiers picked herbs and stuffed them in their belts. They were professionals, and knew all the medicinal plants and which ones were edible.
With the cold so intense and the air so rare, the men started getting nausea and headaches. My nose bled constantly, which annoyed me, but it cheered the men up immensely. In those days nosebleeds were considered a sign from the Gods, and they all took heart each time I had a scarlet stain dribbling down my chin and chest.
Alexander decided to march in intermittence all through the day and night, and so we marched one hour, rested one hour and so on, until we reached the top of the world.
The last ten kilometers were the worst. Bitter wind met us head-on. Funneled through the pass, it seemed as solid as a wall of ice. We leaned our heads into it and felt the cold right through our skulls.
Alexander was on foot, leading his valiant horse, when Bucephalus staggered and nearly fell. Blood sputtered from his nostrils in a crimson gush and Alexander stared, his face white with shock, as his horse sank to his knees. For several minutes the men right behind us held their breaths. No one spoke and the army ground to a halt as Alexander struggled to unfasten the horse's harness, his hands shaking and tears freezing on his cheeks in the harsh wind. Luckily Bucephalus recuperated quickly, and soon he was back on his feet, his eyes puzzled, as if he didn't know quite where he was or what had happened. We could see the summit only a few dozen feet away, but Bucephalus's malaise put a damper on Alexander's joy at reaching the top.
Some men were afraid to venture over the rise, believing that the ends of the earth were right there. Even Alexander, whose unquenchable enthusiasm for adventure had led him this far, seemed unsure of himself. He was also shaken by his horse's fall. He wrapped his arm around his stallion's neck, and together they walked towards the summit. We all stood back. It seemed fitting.
The two figures were silhouetted against the monstrous sky. On either side was emptiness. The sun was just starting to set, and on the opposite horizon the rising moon was clearly visible. It seemed as if he were alone on the top of the earth with only his horse, the sun, and the moon for company. Then he turned to face us, and he raised both arms in triumph. The way was clear. He'd gotten through. The road to Bactria was open. We poured through the pass in a trickle, then a rush as the men hurried to see the marvels that were beyond the mountains.
