Elizabeth Baxter’s fantasy novel The Last Priestess begins with its protagonist, the eponymous ‘last priestess’, Maegwin, in prison. A devotee of the peace-loving goddess Sho-La, Maegwin has been tried (summarily) for the killing of several men, including a nobleman named Hounsey. She is sentenced to be hanged, and gasps her last on the gallows—when a fair-haired, blue-eyed stranger named Rovann arrives, racing into town. He is a messenger from the King, and he comes bearing orders for Maegwin’s release, for Maegwin holds vital information that the King wants to hear from her.
Soon, Maegwin, puzzled and suspicious, is riding alongside Rovann (and a minstrel named Leo, who has latched on to them and refuses to be shaken off) to Tyrlindon, the capital. And along the way, she begins to discover the truth. Who Rovann really is, what evil stalks the land, what sorcery—good and evil—is at work here. And Rovann comes to know the truth behind Maegwin’s killing of those men: a truth that has a greater bearing on the future of the entire kingdom than just the destruction for which Maegwin seeks revenge.
This is a fairly interesting fantasy story, even if there’s not very much here that hasn't been done before. The hero and heroine both have secrets, including a tormented and dark past, and a suddenly-arisen leaning towards the dark side. There is battle, both sword-and-spear-fought as well as magical; there are powers channelled through the Realms, through the elements. There is dark and light, evil and good.
I liked this book, even though I found the attraction between Rovann and Maegwin too sudden to be believable (on the other hand, it doesn't go swiftly overboard, so that is a redeeming factor). The story, too, ends at just the point where you do want to read about the further adventures of these two people as they set off to save their world. I will probably be getting hold of the sequel as well.