The final act in the Oneiros Log! Everything has been building to this. The Nightmare Man has been carefully weaving his web, and it’s time to harvest! Oneiros has been nearly cut in half. They’re without resources, beaten, ignorant, and outmatched.
Hundreds of children will soon realize they’re gaining powers once thought inhuman, and the team is striving to find them. The mother they never knew is so focused on her mission that her efforts threaten to hurt everyone she loves and everything she stands for. The protege must become the teacher, but she can’t fulfill her role until she chooses to accept what that means. The leader will have to choose what matters victory or humanity? All the while, a daughter abandoned, a daughter searched for, is being used as a pawn to threaten her siblings.
All of them think they’re fighting for the right cause. All of them will be betrayed, and the Nightmare Man waits to unveil his most horrible secret. No matter what happens, it will be the end of Oneiros.
M. L. S. Weech was born in August 1979 in Rapid City, South Dakota. He fell in love with fantasy and science fiction at an early age. His love of writing quickly followed when he tried to write a sequel to his favorite movie. He didn't know what copyright infringement was. He can't remember a time he wasn't working on some sort of project from that day on. He wrote for a junior high project. The only way his freshman English teacher could get him to settle down was to let him start writing a book. He completed what he calls his first manuscript when he was 17. He got a ton of feedback that was honest, helpful, and not much fun to listen to, but instead of quit, he simply wrote another, and then another.
He fell in love with reading in high school when he was introduced to Timothy Zahn and the Star Wars novels. Then he was handed Anne McCaffrey, Robert Jordan, Dean Koontz, Brandon Sanderson and so many more. He went from reading to complete homework to reading more than three books a month.
He joined the U.S. Navy as a journalist in 2005. He served on aircraft carriers and destroyers. He served in the deserts of Iraq and the mountains of Afghanistan. He finished his Navy career in 2015 at the Defense Information School, where he still teaches journalism as a civilian instructor. When he wasn't taking pictures or writing features or news stories, he was writing fiction. Photojournalism was a hobby he enjoyed getting paid for, but writing fiction has been and remains his true dream.
His first book, The Journals of Bob Drifter was published March 3, 2015, and he’s published more than ten since. He’s happily married and a father of three wonderful sons.