Long ago the fabled Warrior Trainer was known to Scotland as the guardian of the stone, a
warrior of unmatched skill whom would offer her training to any and all that seek to learn.
Now, in most minds a legend / forgotten, Scotia sits alone in her keep with only a few to
keep her company. Waiting for a time when her services would once again be needed or wanted.
When word begins to spread that the legend of the Warrior Trainer lives again, she is not
greeted with students but competitors instead. Men looking to test their metal and in
killing the Warrior Trainer claim them themselves the best warrior in the land. Again and again
men come to her and again and again they fail and walk away beaten and humbled. Until Ian.
Ian is desperate for a means to kill the Four Horsemen who have killed and ravaged the lands
of his home. When his adoptive father sends him to the Warrior Trainer, he was not expecting
to find a woman. In his pride and fear that his search for skills would be in vain, he does what
all the others have done and try to win against the Warrior Trainer, doubting her ability to
best a man. But she does and with great ease. Humbled, he begs for a chance to train under her and
thus begins their teacher/student relationship however it soon becomes clear that what lays
between them is so much more then that.
But as the threat of the Horseman looms over them, Ian must make a decision - his love for Scotia
or his desire for revenge. Scotia must learn that no one man or one woman can defeat an enemy
that, if not killed - would mean the loss of everything they're ever loved.
While I can truly appreciate this story and the the message and the characters - I couldn't find
it in myself to LOVE it. But I think that's okay. There was a lot to this book that I loved.
Scotia being a shining example. She was from the start to the end - the main focus of this story
and her strength and bravery was a beacon to feminists everywhere. She never needed a man to save her or to fight for her but that didn't mean she couldn't allow a man to be her equal. Ian was a great supportive figure to Scotia throughout the book as he struggled to find his place in her world.
Being a male, with a female teacher and loving a warrior whom he could not get to or want to stop
from putting herself into danger. He never tried to retrain her, he only cared for her safety.
His confidence in her was so marvelous.
The story was of pride and arrogance. All characters had this trait to them, all found ways
to overcome it. The threat of the four horseman was a bit weak and the finally battle wasn't
want I was hoping it to be. However the message was great and I did enjoy the characters - all of
them.