(Description
nicked from B&N.com.)
“Elisha, a barber-surgeon from the poorest streets of
benighted fourteenth-century London, has come a long way from home. He was
always skilled at his work, but skill alone could not protect him on the day
that disaster left his family ruined and Elisha himself accused of murder. With
no other options, Elisha accepted a devil’s bargain from Lucius, a haughty
physician, to avoid death by hanging—by serving under the sadistic doctor as a
battle surgeon of the king’s army, at the front lines of an unjust war.
Elisha worked night and day, both tending to the wounded
soldiers and protecting them from the physician’s experiments. Even so, he soon
found that he had a talent for a surprising and deadly sort of magic, and was
drawn into the clandestine world of sorcery by the enchanting young witch
Brigit—who had baffling ties to his past, and ambitious plans for his future.
Yet even Brigit did not understand the terrible power Elisha could wield, until
the day he was forced to embrace it and end the war...by killing the king.
Now, Elisha has become a wanted man—not only by those who
hate and fear him, but by those who’d seek to woo his support. Because, hidden
behind the politics of court and castle, it is magic that offers power in its purest
form. And the players in that deeper game are stranger and more terrifying than
Elisha could ever have dreamed.
There are the magi, those who have grasped the
secrets of affinity and knowledge to manipulate mind and matter, always working
behind the scenes. There are the indivisi, thought mad by the rest of
the magical world: those so devoted to their subject of study that they have
become “indivisible” from it, and whose influence in their realm is wondrous
beyond even the imaginations of “normal” magi. And then there are—there may
be—the necromancers, whose methods, motives, and very existence remain
mysterious. Where rumors of their passing go, death follows.
But death follows Elisha, too.”
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