Series: Book 2 in the Demon Cycle series
Rating: ****
Tags: EN-Fantasy, Lang:en
Summary
The sun is setting on humanity.
The night now belongs to voracious demons that arise as the sun
sets, preying upon a dwindling population forced to cower
behind ancient and half-forgotten symbols of power. These wards
alone can keep the demons at bay, but legends tell of a
Deliverer: a general—some would say prophet—who
once bound all mankind into a single force that defeated the
demons. Those times, if they ever existed, are long past. The
demons are back, and the return of the Deliverer is just
another myth . . . or is it?Out of the desert rides Ahmann
Jardir, who has forged the warlike desert tribes of Krasia into
a demon-killing army. He has proclaimed himself Shar’Dama
Ka, the Deliverer, and he carries ancient weapons—a spear
and a crown—that give credence to his claim. Sworn to
follow the path of the first Deliverer, he has come north to
bring the scattered city-states of the green lands together in
a war against demonkind—whether they like it or
not. But the northerners claim their own
Deliverer. His name was Arlen, but all know him now as the
Warded Man: a dark, forbidding figure whose skin is tattooed
with wards so powerful they make him a match for any demon. The
Warded Man denies that he is the Deliverer, but his actions
speak louder than words, for he teaches men and women to face
their fears and stand fast against the creatures that have
tormented them for centuries. Once the Shar’Dama Ka
and the Warded Man were friends, brothers in arms. Now they are
fierce adversaries. Caught between them are Renna, a young
woman pushed to the edge of human endurance; Leesha, a proud
and beautiful healer whose skill in warding surpasses that of
the Warded Man himself; and Rojer, a traveling fiddler whose
uncanny music can soothe the demons—or stir them into
such frenzy that they attack one
another. Yet as old allegiances
are tested and fresh alliances forged, all are blissfully
unaware of the appearance of a new breed of demon, more
intelligent—and deadly—than any that have come
before.