**An action-packed whodunit set in San Juan by the crime fiction master and author of _Point Blank._ "A book by this guy is a cause for happiness" (Stephen King).** Part-time actor-thief Alan Grofield has had his share of odd gigs, including a number of dangerous heists with a certain ruthless crim
The Dame
β Scribed by R. A. Salvatore
- Book ID
- 108582768
- Publisher
- Tor Books
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 415 KB
- Series
- Saga of the First King 3
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780765317902
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The vast road network of Honce, completed a decade before, had brought great optimism to the people of the land. Commerce could travel more freely and so could armies, and those armies, it was hoped, would rid the land at long last of the vicious, bloody cap dwarfs and goblins. For the first time, the many individual kingdoms, the holdings of Honce, would be brought closer together, perhaps even united. For the last few years, those promises had become a nightmare to the folk, as two powerful lairds fought for supremacy of a hoped-for united kingdom.
Bransen Garibond, the Highwayman, held little real interest in that fight. To him the warring lairds were two sides of the same coin. Whichever side won, the outcome for the people of Honce would be the same, Bransen believed. A journey north, however, taught Bransen that his views were simplistic at best, and that some things--like honor and true friendship-- might truly matter.
In The Dame , Bransenβs road becomes a quest for the truth, of Honce and of himself, a quest to put right over wrong. That path is fraught with confusion and fraud, and a purposeful blurring of morality by those who would seek to use the Highwaymanβs extraordinary battle skills and popularity among the commonfolk for their own nefarious ends.
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π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## The Golden Dame He had everything any man could ever want or aspire to have---astoundingly handsome, quite possibly all the money he could dream of, a gang filled with men that would die for the sake of their 'King' without a thought, even a wonderful woman that would do anything he desired in t