The Hellknights are a brutal organization of warriors and spellcasters dedicated to maintaining law and order at any cost. For devil-blooded Jheraal, a veteran Hellknight investigator, even the harshest methods are justified if it means building a better world for her daughter. Yet things get personal when a serial killer starts targeting hellspawn like Jheraal and her child, somehow magically removing their hearts and trapping the victims in a state halfway between life and death. With other Hellknights implicated in the crime, Jheraal has no choice but to join forces with a noble paladin and a dangerously cunning diabolist to defeat an ancient enemy for whom even death is no deterrent.
From celebrated dark fantasy author Liane Merciel comes an adventure of love, murder, and grudges from beyond the grave, set in the award-winning world of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game.
Of the four Pathfinder Tales books that I have read, this is my favorite. I wanted to read it as soon as I learned the premise and was delighted by its execution. I liked that it actually centered on the party of them, too, not just on one character.
When I discovered that the diabolist was Valenne from Nightglass and the paladin the lover she still carries a torch for? I actually squealed. Valenne was one of several characters fron Nightglass that I wanted more of, and her presence throughout made me oh so happy, even if she never got to be a viewpoint character like Ederras, Jheraal, and Sechel.
Jheraal, the titular hellknight, anchors the story with her complex dedication to her mission, to her companions, to her order, to her daughter. Stoic and guarded to protect herself and those she cares about, Merciel treats us to her tenderness and care, too. So much of Jheraal's arc finds her negotiating the tensions between all of that as the villains threats become increasingly personal. The way in which she and the assassin Sechel's conflicted feelings about their tiefling heritage served as narrative foils to each other gave the story added emotional depth and complexity.
Paladins can be hit or miss for me, but I took a liking to Ederras almost immediately. It is fun to watch he and Jheraal come to appreciate and eventually trust each other over the course of the novel. His struggle to make sense of his feelings for Valenne, and her feelings for him, define much of his arc. The centrality of consensual pain to Valenne's and Ederras's growing relationship ends up being remarkably wholesome; what a pleasant change fo pace!
The way in which those feelings intersect with the social demands of Ederras refurbishing his family name and securing its future makes for compelling story; it also gives Merciel an opportunity to show off the complexities of Cheliax's political situation.
Throughout, Cheliax's tyranny is a pervasive presence. While the ethical quandaries of living within an evil nation are lightly treated, we see each of our heroes (even Valenne) hemmed in by it but trying to ameliorate some of its inherent cruelty and inhumanity. The compromises they must make to it often bite, but it makes the goodness they carve out from those compromises compelling.
Content-wise: Sexual content doesn't get much past PG-13, and sex is never the focus of the narrative. I guess a number of people engaged in sexual activities do feature in one scene, but the whole thing is described lightly with only the faint hint of lurid detail. The violence is (unsurprisingly) more frequent, though little is graphic about it. Sechel's murder victims are mutilated, do include children, but the mutilation is clean, magically precise and quick. No dwelling upon torture, though there are some harrowing moments. A minor chord of body horror (especially the loss of bodily autonomy) winds through the book. Mentions of slavery in Cheliax, but no slaveholding characters that I can recall.
Hellknights from the inside, and all the internecine politics
What do you get when you forge a party comprising a LG paladin, a LN Hellknight, and a LE diabolist? Three different interpretations of the power of Law. More importantly, you get a rollicking good time w/ great characters, villains, dialogue, and a strong vote for best supporting character (that would be the diabolist's companion, Vhaeros) in a PF book.
Kudos on making us believe a star-crossed romance between the paladin and the diabolist could, maybe, possibly, work out. Some of the best dialogue in the book came from Velenne, in fact.
Editing was very good; not a lot of noticeable errors at all.
I would love a sequel to this book, w/ all 3 characters working together again (and Vhaeros makes 4). Also, a shout out to those in the acknowledgments who contributed towards the final product; thank you as well!
I thought the action in this one was excellent. The character interactions between the paladin and his companions were interesting - but sometimes over the top. Some of the Hellknight principles and the eventual final setting were a bit Dragonlance-ish, but didn't detract from the flow of the book.
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A hellknight, a diabolist, and a paladin. Quite a team, that. Looking forward to it.
A hellknight, a diabolist, and a paladin. Quite a team, that.
One of the things I wanted to do in this book was pose one possible answer to the age-old question of "can a paladin team up with a known evildoer?" Like, forget about the conceal alignment or lie-to-the-paladin tricks. What happens if the evildoer is just straight-up "pleased to meet you, hope you guessed my name"?
Posing the question made me laugh, anyway, which is 99.5% of what makes these stories fun for me. ;)
A hellknight, a diabolist, and a paladin. Quite a team, that.
One of the things I wanted to do in this book was pose one possible answer to the age-old question of "can a paladin team up with a known evildoer?" Like, forget about the conceal alignment or lie-to-the-paladin tricks. What happens if the evildoer is just straight-up "pleased to meet you, hope you guessed my name"?
Posing the question made me laugh, anyway, which is 99.5% of what makes these stories fun for me. ;)
Will we also learn what happens when the hellknight, diabolist, and paladin walk into a bar?
A hellknight, a diabolist, and a paladin. Quite a team, that.
One of the things I wanted to do in this book was pose one possible answer to the age-old question of "can a paladin team up with a known evildoer?" Like, forget about the conceal alignment or lie-to-the-paladin tricks. What happens if the evildoer is just straight-up "pleased to meet you, hope you guessed my name"?
Posing the question made me laugh, anyway, which is 99.5% of what makes these stories fun for me. ;)
Will we also learn what happens when the hellknight, diabolist, and paladin walk into a bar?
Two out of the three, anyway.
The diabolist doesn't really do bars. Unless they're the kind of bars that have $15 cocktails with no fewer than three unpronounceable ingredients per drink. Because that right there, that is a Lawful Evil kind of bar.
I'm wondering, what is the time frame of this book? Like, how long from start to finish in story line? One month, one year or another amount of time?
It's a single summer, iirc about ten weeks from start to finish, not counting the epilogue.
There are, or should be, enough context clues to figure out the exact number of weeks, but it's been a couple of years since I wrote the thing so I wouldn't want to try blind guessing it now.
Wow, just read this today and loved it. I had one question, though, about the very cool "dog", Vhaeros.
Was that a unique fiend created for the book, or is he (?) an actual, canon-blessed (heh heh) fiend? I couldn't figure out what type of devil Vhaeros was supposed to be. Regardless, there are some great scenes w/ him. Trying to get the children to pet him in Westcrown...twisted fun! And then his last scene (no spoilers)...
Wow, just read this today and loved it. I had one question, though, about the very cool "dog", Vhaeros.
Was that a unique fiend created for the book, or is he (?) an actual, canon-blessed (heh heh) fiend? I couldn't figure out what type of devil Vhaeros was supposed to be. Regardless, there are some great scenes w/ him. Trying to get the children to pet him in Westcrown...twisted fun! And then his last scene (no spoilers)...
I appreciate the feedback, but his master is not a summoner, but a diabolist. I admit I haven't looked at that class lately, but I don't believe they have access to eidolons.
I'm starting to lean towards "unique fiend created by the author for plot purposes". Regardless, he was a cool addition to a great book.
I appreciate the feedback, but his master is not a summoner, but a diabolist. I admit I haven't looked at that class lately, but I don't believe they have access to eidolons.
I'm starting to lean towards "unique fiend created by the author for plot purposes". Regardless, he was a cool addition to a great book.
The diabolist in the book might not have taken levels in the Diabolist PrC.
I appreciate the feedback, but his master is not a summoner, but a diabolist. I admit I haven't looked at that class lately, but I don't believe they have access to eidolons.
I'm starting to lean towards "unique fiend created by the author for plot purposes". Regardless, he was a cool addition to a great book.
The diabolist in the book might not have taken levels in the Diabolist PrC.
I really don't think he can be an eidolon. There are large swathes of the book in which he's in a completely different part of the city on his own and acting independently from his "master". I'm no expert, but I believe eidolons can't be too far away from their masters.
I appreciate the feedback, but his master is not a summoner, but a diabolist. I admit I haven't looked at that class lately, but I don't believe they have access to eidolons.
I'm starting to lean towards "unique fiend created by the author for plot purposes". Regardless, he was a cool addition to a great book.
The diabolist in the book might not have taken levels in the Diabolist PrC.
I really don't think he can be an eidolon. There are large swathes of the book in which he's in a completely different part of the city on his own and acting independently from his "master". I'm no expert, but I believe eidolons can't be too far away from their masters.
The Unfetter spell would let an eidolon operate at any distance away from its summoner, but the master in this case has access to powerful sorcerer/wizard spells that are not on the summoner spell list. She is definitely a sorcerer or wizard and not a summoner.
I appreciate the feedback, but his master is not a summoner, but a diabolist. I admit I haven't looked at that class lately, but I don't believe they have access to eidolons.
I'm starting to lean towards "unique fiend created by the author for plot purposes". Regardless, he was a cool addition to a great book.
The diabolist in the book might not have taken levels in the Diabolist PrC.
I really don't think he can be an eidolon. There are large swathes of the book in which he's in a completely different part of the city on his own and acting independently from his "master". I'm no expert, but I believe eidolons can't be too far away from their masters.
The Unfetter spell would let an eidolon operate at any distance away from its summoner, but the master in this case has access to powerful sorcerer/wizard spells that are not on the summoner spell list. She is definitely a sorcerer or wizard and not a summoner.
Don't forget that Summoners and their Eidolons have that matching rune on their foreheads.
Aaaand since fiction can't use the OGL material and are therefore not bound by it, looking for close representation of game rules in fiction is somewhat futile.
Aaaand since fiction can't use the OGL material and are therefore not bound by it, looking for close representation of game rules in fiction is somewhat futile.
*nods*
Until it's recursive which is why we have stats for House Drakes :3
I need help with this: on page 204, what does word "adel" mean in this context? I'm pretty proud of my understanding of English language, but this book has couple words I've never heard before and this one I don't fully get even with googling what its supposed to mean x'D
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CorvusMask wrote:
I need help with this: on page 204, what does word "adel" mean in this context? I'm pretty proud of my understanding of English language, but this book has couple words I've never heard before and this one I don't fully get even with googling what its supposed to mean x'D
It's a type of flat boat with fabric sides and top where you can open and close the sides to provide privacy or allow wind in. Think pleasure cruise boat, with cloth windows that can be raised or lowered.