Valor of the Healer: A Fantasy Romance Novel

Valor of the Healer: A Fantasy Romance Novel

by Angela Highland
Valor of the Healer: A Fantasy Romance Novel

Valor of the Healer: A Fantasy Romance Novel

by Angela Highland

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Overview

The Rook

An assassin hired by vengeful elven rebels to kill the calculating Duke of Shalridan, Julian walks into a trap and barely escapes with his life. Healed by a beautiful captive in the dungeons, he's enthralled and vows to free her from the duke's clutches.

The Hawk

A Knight of the Hawk duty-bound to cleanse elven magic from Adalonia, Kestar has a secret—and heretical—ability to sense the use of magic from afar. He knows something suspicious is happening in the duke's keep, but he has no idea how deep the conspiracy goes.

The Dove

A half-elven healer with no control over her magic, Faanshi is the goddess's to command. She's always been a pawn of the powerful, but after healing two mysterious and very different men, she faces a choice that may decide the fate of the whole kingdom…

Book one of the Rebels of Adalonia

113,000 words

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781426895364
Publisher: Carina Press
Publication date: 04/15/2013
Series: Rebels of Adalonia , #1
Sold by: HARLEQUIN
Format: eBook
Pages: 384
Sales rank: 144,742
File size: 950 KB

Read an Excerpt

Kilmerry, AC 1876

No moon crossed the sky that night, nor did any starlight pierce the clouds to dilute the darkness. A rain-heavy breeze rattled the windowpanes of Lomhannor Hall and breached its walls in a hundred different places, filling its chambers and corridors with drafts. Those within huddled in their beds with warming pans and down comforters, lulled into oblivion by the weather's assault. No one was awake to catch a stealthy tread on the Hall's back stairways, the ones where only the slaves and servants walked.

There'd been challenges to getting in, of course, though a wagonload of cobblestones and a laborer's garb had gotten Julian past the gates. Bundled up in his coat against the wind and rain, the groundskeeper had been far more interested in his warm hearth than in explaining to an oaf of a stonemason why His Grace the Duke of Shalridan owed him three ducats for the delivery, not six. The argument gained him leave to argue his case to the seneschal, and no one challenged him once he was inside the Hall. A servant's walk and a wheedling tone of voice told those he passed that he had an accepted place in the daily order of life.

And the map of the great house from the footman he'd bribed told him where to hide until darkness fell.

Sequestered in that empty cellar, he shifted from his disguise to his working attire. It took time—he had but one hand with which to change his appearance, one eye with which to see what he was doing. But with systematic care, laborer's clothing yielded to formfitting black, the gray wig to his true hair. Cotton wadding removed from his cheeks altered the structure of his face, and soot from the hearth closest to his hiding place darkened it, turning him from head to foot into a walking shadow. A black patch, pulled into place, hid his false left eye, and a leather glove swathed the false hand on his right wrist. All throughout he checked and rechecked his weapons, making sure they occupied the places his left hand could reach.

In the night's smallest hours the Rook emerged to take the servants' stairs to the third floor, listening for any sound that might be out of place, and keeping a wall to his blind side at all times. With the patience of a snake slithering past a drowsing lion's paws, he investigated every corner, doorway and alcove, never moving till each one proved safe. He would reach his goal—but only if the lion did not wake.

Behind his mask of soot, Julian's mouth curled in a tight smile. Lomhannor meant heart of the lion. But the place's venerable history and the structure that evoked its name, hinting at the shape of a massive crouching cat, interested him far less than its wealth. On any other night, any of the prizes a thief could spirit out of the place would have tempted him. Tonight, however, he sought a different prize. Tonight he sought a life.

As he stole through the passageways, Julian reviewed his mental map of the Hall. The footman's parchment erred in the sizes of certain rooms and the number of doorways in certain corridors, but it led him nonetheless to the southeastern wing, where the duke and his family resided. Their wing of the house faced east for the best views of the town in the valley below, and south in honor of the Duchess Khamsin's distant homeland. In the vital details of that wing—which doors would be locked, which rooms uninhabited—the parchment was accurate enough. So far.

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