Blog Archives

Courage Facing Overwhelming Odds

Kurt Springs Author Interview

Promise of Mercy blends political upheaval, telepathic warfare, and a frantic intergalactic rescue mission involving the Dreamscape Warriors. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

The triplets (Deirdre, Aisling, and Bayvin) get their inspiration from their father, who is their hero. In the first book, Price of Vengeance, Liam became an orphan at two when giant insects called “Chitin” destroyed his family’s farm and killed his parents. Taken in by a prominent family on the planet of Etrusci, they raise him alongside their own son, Randolf. Liam joined the city’s military as an adult. When he is cut off from the last city on the planet, he discovers an alien intelligence (named Azurius) controlling the Chitin and that a traitor is responsible for his parents’ deaths. After getting back into the city, he discovers the traitor had his beloved foster parents murdered. While doing what he can to thwart the alien, he gives in to his desire for vengeance and slaughters the traitor. However, his moral upbringing reasserts itself. Left full of remorse, he still needs to defeat Azurius and save his people from destruction.

In the second novel, Legacy of Valor, the triplets are only children, having grown up hearing stories of their father’s exploits. Liam now leads Etursci’s Special Operations Company and is attached to the New Terran Marine Corps’ Third Division to retake the moon of Treespo, orbiting the planet Beta Proximus IV, from Marshal Kergan’s Rebel forces. “No plan survives its first encounter with the enemy,” is an old Marine saying. Minutes after landing on the hostile surface of Treespo, treachery decapitates the division, leaving Liam the senior combat officer. Treachery has stripped the Third Division of its support. As forces scramble to assist both sides, Liam must keep the warriors under his command alive.

For personal inspiration, there are science fiction books that use ESP (Extra Sensory Perception), though I put my unique twist on it. Few military science fiction books explore a person’s consciousness being used outside the body, which is called “Dreamwalking.” While Dreamwalking a person often has to fight enemy Dreamwalkers. I also drew inspiration from video games such as Halo, in particular with weapons and tactics in space combat.

How do you manage character development throughout your series?

I decide what type of character I need. Sometimes it develops organically. Other times, I must do research on the type of training they would require and the equipment they would use. Then I develop their backstory to figure out what motivates them. Things like childhood trauma, safety, and support during formative development, and how this shapes a character in the novel. This was especially true in Price of Vengeance, where the death of Liam’s birth parents helped to shape him.

In Legacy of Valor, I set up a scenario where Liam was forced to take charge of a campaign, fighting against overwhelming odds. I needed characters who were combat veterans on both sides. This included a solid Rebel Commander in the form of General Sorel Maranz. Marshal Kergan, who, like Liam, suffered from childhood trauma but dealt with it by becoming vengeful. The story also required an experienced, no-nonsense non-commissioned officer. Enter Gunnery Sergeant Anthony Russo.

In Promise of Mercy, the triplets, Aisling, Bayvin, and especially Deirdre, needed to be their father’s daughters. The girls returned home after advanced training in the Finnian Shock Forces. They’ve inherited their father’s marksmanship, his leadership skills, and his ESP powers. However, they aren’t clones of each other. Deirdre is their best shot, and leadership comes naturally to her. Aisling is an explosives expert and pilot. Bayvin specializes in electronic warfare and excels in military intelligence. Their brother is still in his teens but is already a skilled pilot. We also meet Marissa, a former Rebel war criminal who must confront her past once her daughter, Gayla, is born. Marissa goes against Kergan to befriend Liam and return him to his family.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

As this is the third book in my series, several themes from the first and second novels carry through: the importance of family ties, the pitfalls of vengeance, and the need for courage when facing overwhelming odds. Liam draws strength from his family, even though he was an orphan. His love for family led him down a path of revenge against a traitor. Upon achieving his vengeance, Liam instantly realized it was a mistake, eventually evolving past the need for revenge.

Kergan lost his family when he was young as well and is still traumatized by it. This makes him obsessed with punishing those responsible. Kergan is an effective leader, and his followers are loyal. Yet, holding on to his pain has made him ruthless to his enemies. Deirdre, in Promise of Mercy, has sworn to kill a Rebel war criminal named Marissa for her crimes. As she continues the search for her father, doubt gnaws at her.

Courage is another central theme. Liam and his family face overwhelming odds throughout the series. Liam has needed to push past physical injury in Price of Vengeance. In Legacy of Valor, he must step into shoes seemingly too big for him and keep the combined human forces alive until help can arrive. Deirdre keeps a larger Rebel force at bay as they search for their father and seek to deny Kergan the use of his new terror weapon.

Can we look forward to a fourth installment of the Dreamscape Warriors series? Where will it take readers?

In the fourth book, Addiction of Power, Liam is older. His daughters are now middle-aged. His son, Aidan, is a veteran fighter pilot. The daughter that Liam and his wife Celinia conceived in Promise of Mercy, Tetia, is in her teens and planning to follow her mother’s path as a priestess and healer. The theme of family carries over. Aidan agrees to deliver information to Finnian Intelligence while on a trip with his Great Aunt Máire and sister Tetia when Kergan attacks their ship. After escaping, Marissa and her daughter Gayla, whom the audience meets in Promise of Mercy befriends Aidan and his family. This starts a journey to end 700 years interstellar civil war. Factions on both sides of the conflict must wrestle with the implications of peace; an end to the bloodshed versus losing power. It also plants the seeds for threats from beyond the Milky Way

Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook-Author | Facebook-Book | LinkedIn | Website | Blog

Buy Now From Amazon

Promise of Mercy

Promise of Mercy pushes the Dreamscape Warriors saga into darker, sharper territory as the long-idle Utopian Founders wake after six centuries and move to seize power by force. Their plot spirals outward fast. Liam O’Connor is kidnapped and flung through an ancient portal into the unknown, the Temple priestesses are drugged and held hostage, and the O’Connor children are thrust into a frantic rescue operation that tears across worlds. The book mixes political upheaval, telepathic warfare, and tight family bonds in a story that never stops moving.

While reading, I found myself pulled in by the heart of the book, which is not the action, but the relationships. Springs writes family moments with a warmth that caught me off guard. A quiet conversation between Liam and Deirdre over pastries feels as gripping as any firefight. Even scenes of chaos keep circling back to loyalty, fear, duty, and love. I liked how the story makes room for softness inside a hard universe. The writing itself is straightforward, sometimes almost plain, but the plainness works. It lets the emotions land without dressing them up.

I also caught myself getting fired up during the more intense chapters. The Founders’ arrogance, their cold talk of “genetic purity,” and their plan to eliminate Liam or “correct” his children stirred real anger in me. On the flip side, the fight inside the Temple hooked me completely. Seeing Bayvin take a hit, Aisling and Deirdre charging in, Celinia steadying herself even while drugged, and the arch priestess trying to hold everything together made the stakes feel personal. The author writes these scenes with a quick rhythm that kept me flipping pages and muttering under my breath. The book might lean heavily on lore sometimes, but even then, I didn’t mind. It felt like being swept into a world that genuinely believes in its own history.

By the end, I walked away feeling surprisingly moved. This is a story where the characters’ courage matters more than their weapons, and where mercy is treated as a kind of power. The book would be a great fit for readers who enjoy sci-fi adventures with real heart, for fans of military space opera with family drama baked in, and for anyone who likes telepaths, portals, and rebellions, all mixed with warmth and humor. If that sounds like your style, Promise of Mercy delivers.

Pages: 446 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DBBBNN5P

Buy Now From Amazon