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The Diabolus Chronicles Books 1-4 (Ebook Bundle)
The Diabolus Chronicles Books 1-4 (Ebook Bundle)
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Was it the sun above him? Or was he not so alone as he imagined? Perhaps, by some miracle, a rescuer peered into the oily depths in search of him. Wherever those depths may be. How had he come to be here?
Help me.
His cries bubbled around him. His lungs ached with a ferocity that felt certain to crack his ribs. He kicked and flailed, struggling to raise arms of lead and reach in vain for the fading light. Ever downward he travelled, where the darkness was ripe with unseen horrors. The pressure grew upon him, threatening to shatter his skull. A dull throb cursed him all the while, an ache at his temple he did not dare explore for fear of finding his bone cracked.
The air, what little of it remained, fled his lungs entirely. And the darkness consumed him, pressing his lids tight against the softness of his eyeballs.
A moment, an hour, a day or a year passed by, and at last his eyelids lifted.
He lay upon his back. The darkness had not fled, but the fiendish waters had done so. Silas sucked in a breath of such magnitude he felt as though he might take in all the air in the world. Releasing an anguished, haggard cry, he threw out his arms – and found a fresh enemy. Barely had his arms left his sides and they were halted by a solid barrier.
Dear god, not this.
He kicked his feet, only to find he could barely raise them more than an inch. Fear burrowed beneath his skin and made its prickling way about his body. Blind, Silas pressed at his surrounds and found them all too wanting. He lay in this confounded box yet again, a space that offered only the merest of movement. No matter that he recognised the illusion of the mind that trapped him here, his terror could not be stemmed.
The scream tore its way from his core and dug its claws into his innards, bursting from his mouth with all the force of the terror that had birthed it.
Words tumbled from him. ‘Help me! Help me!’
Silas rocked and punched with all the might he could summon, his cries thrust back at him in the confined space, punishing his ears. He was dizzy with panic and desperation. The strangest jangling of a bell came from a distance. What new hell awaited him? The sound was alien to the sharp edges of this old memory. He dared still himself a moment, and was plunged into a silence so deep that he could not bear it. He rocked and punched and kicked anew. But he fought a stalwart enemy. One that did not yield no matter the assault he levelled at it. His energies deserted him, his strength growing as weak as his cries.
Blast this infernal torment, this mindful horror that took him so. When would these memories leave him in peace?
When he at last lay still, sobbing into the darkness, he heard it. A thud above him. Followed by another, and another, so rapid in their succession and clear in their source. Someone dug for him.
A blazing desperation overtook him, and he shouted and punched and cried out: ‘I’m here, I’m here, I’m here!’ His voice, so terribly overwrought and cracked, could barely form the words at all. ‘Here, here. Here!’ He sputtered and gasped.
The next thud was right above him, aimed at the barrier that held him from the world. Hot tears pricked at his eyes, burning their way free.
‘Fear not, my lad. We’ll soon have you upright again.’
How heavenly that voice sounded. Silas’s cries hacked at his chest. Blessed salvation had arrived at last to drag him from this nightmare.
The world lightened. The air was cool and caressed his skin like the very feathers of a lover’s fan. A silvery light was gentle against him, but his fragile eyes squinted through his tears. Silas sucked in a new breath. The rich, dank scent of turned earth embraced his tortured nostrils.
‘Welcome back, dear chap.’ Sweeter than honey, the voice was a balm like no other. A face as round as the angelic moon appeared over him. A full-cheeked elderly man of Oriental persuasion, his familiar smile set in place. He had arrived at last to drag Silas free. ‘Do take it easy. Death does take a toll on one.’
But Silas would spend not one more moment in these confines. With a raw sob he launched himself out of his grave, clawing at the rise of earth about him, pulling himself ever higher. His fingers found the coarseness of the rope and clung to it. The jangling of the bell returned once more, not a figment of his burdened imagination at all but clear and crisp upon the air.
‘Do let go of that rope, dear boy. You’ll wake the rest of the dead.’
The amiable man’s request was made politely enough, but Silas would no sooner let loose the rope than he would lay back down in his coffin. Along with the frantic ringing of the bell came the animalistic sounds he made as he clambered back into the world, guttural grunts and hisses mixed with rib-snapping sobs. How he loathed this moment most of all, when fear had rendered him more beast than man. His entire body shook so hard that his teeth rattled in his head. He released the rope and threw himself at the only other fixture of substance he could locate. A simple wooden cross, standing tilted at the head of his grave. Not a marking upon it. No name. No note of the date his fate had befallen him.
‘Mr Mercer, calm down now.’
This voice was new and foreign and most certainly female. But he cared little for it at the moment. Silas had only one purpose. To be free of his grave. The tingling of the bell grew more chaotic as he scrambled from the earth. His fingers found the hard edge of something above him, curling like raven’s claws upon the coolness of metal.
‘Silas, Silas, whatever is the problem?’
He threw his elbows up against the woman who sought to stay him. ‘Unhand me, I’ll not be buried again.’
‘Of course not, you foolish dolt.’
He could not see her amusement, his eyes blurred with tears, but he heard it well enough, bubbling her words.
A shape appeared before him, and Silas bared his teeth. He’d be stopped by no one. ‘I said unhand me,’ he cried. ‘Stop her, Mr Ahari. I beg of you.’
Where the blazes had the old man gone? His saviour had left the job undone this time.
‘Right, that is quite enough, Mr Mercer.’ A sudden blow struck at his cheek. A stinging slap that snapped his head aside.
He blinked, his breath coming in shudders. The world trembled and revealed itself anew. No more did the malodour of the earth fill his senses, rather it was the richness of jasmine upon the air. Silas found himself on his knees, the softness of the earth replaced by the hardness of a wooden surface. The air was pleasantly warm, not tinged with the chill of the midnight hour as it had been that awful night.
‘Mr Mercer?’ The woman spoke once more, her voice as soft as a summer breeze. ‘Are you quite all right? Can you hear me?’
He nodded, somewhat numbly. His hair was damp, drips glancing off his shoulders. He wiped a hand across his eyes. His face was slick with moisture.
The graveyard was certainly gone. That night’s memory chased away once more. But it was not his bed he found himself in as was normally the case, waking in a flood of sweat and twisted sheets.
Instead he knelt in the parlour room of his cottage, the small accommodation he’d come to think of as home these past strange weeks. The fire crackled away cheerfully in the hearth, lit candles adorning the windowsills, his favourite armchair sitting empty and waiting.
‘Mr Mercer?’
The woman who had very likely struck him knelt beside him. Her midnight-blue gown, trimmed with black lace, pooled about her with the fabric almost touching his knees. The skirt was marked with dark patches where dampness clung to the material.
‘Jane,’ he croaked.
The woman nodded, the golden tone of her skin warmed by the glow of the fire, the dancing light catching at the jewels about her slim neck and weighing down the lobes of her ears. Heavy also was the waft of jasmine, for wherever Jane went her perfume dominated.
‘Well then,’ she said quietly. ‘It seems bathing does not sit well with you.’
‘Bathing?’ He frowned.
She fluttered a hand towards him. ‘You can probably release the bath now.’
He turned his head. A copper tub sat alongside him, steam still rising from the waters within, though those waters were indeed rather low. He still clung to the curled lip of the bath, fingers aching, knuckles white. The floorboards about him were drenched, the edge of the rug beneath his favourite armchair saturated.
All at once his jumbled thoughts cleared. ‘Oh my goodness.’
His hands flew to his lap, where his manhood lay nestled between his broad thighs, on glaring display. Silas was entirely naked.
‘You have gone quite red.’ Jane rose to her feet with a coy smile and a rustle of silk. ‘But no need to be so abashed. It is hardly anything I’ve not seen before. I tended you in those first few days after you arrived at Holly Village when you could do little but sleep. And I assure you, you’ve nothing at all to be ashamed of. In fact if I were you, I’d be showing off that splendid body every moment I could.’
His face burned. He’d not known it was Jane who had nursed him through those first confusing days, and the knowledge did not sit well with him. He scanned the room in desperate search of a covering. A towel was draped over the second of the armchairs in the room, a creaky leather chair that he did not favour.
He coughed. ‘Could you please pass me the towel, Miss Handel?’
‘Of course.’ Jane’s gown whispered as she moved, at a pace far too slow for Silas’s liking. ‘Are you quite recovered? That was a rather bad turn you took. I feared you were going to break a bone, you scrambled so madly from the tub.’
Silas swallowed, recalling it all too well now. Dipping his toes into the water, sinking his body into the depths. Curling his knees up to his chest so he might submerge his head beneath the surface.
The wave of panic that rose up to greet him as the liquid covered his nose and mouth.
‘I…I drowned,’ he whispered.
‘There was no chance of that.’ Jane smiled, and what a fine smile it was. ‘You could hardly fit that grand body in the tub as it was.’
‘No, no. Not here.’ Silas stared at the puddle surrounding him. ‘I believe it is drowning that sent me to my grave.’ He could still feel the burn of the water against the back of his throat, the thunderous beat of his heart, the glimmer of light above that taunted him as he sank ever deeper. ‘It came before the other memory this time. I saw my grave, as always, I saw Mr Ahari release me from it. But first I drowned.’
⚔️Step into gothic Victorian England… where monsters hide, secrets kill, and magick runs rampant.
📚 Ebook Bundle Books 1-4 — Exclusive to My Online Store!
Silas Mercer awakens in a graveyard with no memory of his past. Recruited by the clandestine Order of the Golden Dawn, he’s partnered with Tobias Astaroth: a scandalous, infuriating demon who seems determined to make every moment a battle. 😈
Enemies. Partners. Something more.
As they hunt horrors that shouldn’t exist, Silas and Tobias discover the deadliest danger may not be what lurks outside—but what burns between them. 🔥
This exclusive bundle includes the first four books in The Diabolus Chronicles:
1️⃣ The Bandalore
2️⃣ The Verderer
3️⃣ The Skriker
4️⃣ The Greensward
✨ Dive into dark fantasy, slow-burn MM romance, and gothic mystery—where every twist will keep you turning pages late into the night.
💡 Why Buy This Bundle?
✅ Save time and money — get 4 books at once
✅ Read in order for the full story experience
✅ Exclusive to this store
✅ Perfect for binge-reading fans of MM fantasy and gothic mystery
📩 Instant access: After purchase, you’ll instantly receive an email from BookFunnel to claim your ebooks.

Great story, highs & lows & very enthralling. My biggest problem was putting them down to get work done. Highly recommend.
I'm currently reading book 6, can't put them down till I finish. Such a great story. Full emersion in the story of Patch and Sickle. Onward we go.
The first novel started at a bit of a slower pace, but built up into a lovely gruesome climax. I quickly continued to book two and was not disappointed. I was beginning to wonder if Pitch was ever going to become likeable right about the time he did. I was supposed to go do chores the day I finished book two, but instead I started and finished book three. Unfortunately, I had to go to work, so I stayed up late each night this week to finish book four. I'm about to go buy book five.