The Warrior is a book I picked up back in March from the Goodwill bins. I can’t thank the person who parted ways with it enough because I absolutely loved this story and am so happy I found the book when I did! Otherwise I doubt I’d have ever known about it. For those eight months it’s been one of many others in my unread stacks of books but I’ve had a hankering to get around to it for some time. The description on the back grabbed my attention enough to get it while at the bins and by the time I was through with the prologue I was properly invested and loving it!
The story starts long ago, over five hundred years ago, in the 1500s on the coast of what’s now known as Georgia. John Nightwalker is looking out over his village of the Ah-ni-yv-wi-ya tribe. For some time he’d been having visions of something going terribly wrong, hence his desire to keep a lookout for anything dangerous on the horizon. That unfortunate day comes at the same time that a storm is moving in. Amidst the barrage of rain and thunder and fierce winds a spaniard with his eye always on the prize, Antonio Vargas, finds the land he’s been looking for for months. The land that is rumored to be filled with riches. Nightwalker is hurrying back to the village from his high lookout, eager to protect his wife, Night Fawn. Some elders approach the men coming up to the beach on their small boats and it doesn’t take long for the visitors to start taking what doesn’t belong to them.
Nightwalker arrives too late. Thanks to the cover of the storm he utilizes his bow and arrow to take down a handful of the invaders. Using their own weapons, he slices and dices enough to strike fear into the captain, Antonio, and he signals for a retreat. Nightwalker wants to finish what he’s started. He wants to avenge those he lost, those who made up the entirety of his village, those he’s loved and always known. He reaches out to the Old Ones, the elders of the tribe who have long passed, with sky stones and finds himself struck with the newfound power of immortality. Antonio is in awe of what he’s seeing, especially after a bullet that should’ve entered Nightwalker chest bounces off as if it were a droplet of rain.
Antonio is eager to appear in command and control despite having signaled to retreat while in the village. His crewmen don’t take too kindly to seeing weakness from their captain so they take over and send him to the bottom of the ocean. This leads Nightwalker to walk the land of the living for century after century, looking for the soul of the man who took his wife’s life, in order to finish what he started. This entire bit of the story was the prologue. Just the prologue!! I found myself so engrossed and pulled into the story during this horrific and action filled twenty pages that I knew this was a story I was going to thoroughly enjoy and it came as no surprise at all just how quickly I flew through the rest of it!
We fast forward to the present, roughly 2009, where a five hundred year old John Nightwalker is still living in Georgia in a home built on the same land close to where his village used to be. Right next to the ocean with the beautiful sky and winds that flow through his house. John is at a bank in Savannah when things go wrong. A man attempts a robbery but the teller he passed his note to fainted, alerting others to what he’s trying to do. Shooting ensues, a bullet flies through John’s chest, and there are at least a dozen witnesses to the spectacle. The bank manager and a detective are in awe at how John’s through and through bullet wound managed to heal and close up in no time at all.
In the prologue the Old Ones explained to John that his life would be sustained until his target, his wife’s murderer, is brought to justice. We learn that over the years John has seen many battles, from civil to world wars, and other conflicts that took him around the world, mainly with the intent of following the internal feeling of an ache in his body that the man he is after has been reincarnated, his soul placed in someone else who he must destroy.
At this point in the story we’re introduced to Alicia Ponte, our other main character. She is the daughter of the western hemispheres largest arms manufacturer, a man named Richard Ponte. She overhears a discussion between her father and his business partner, Jacob Carruthers, and is put into a state of shock due to what she’s hearing. It turns out that her father has been supplying arms to both sides of the Iraq war. Knowing she has to expose her father in one way or another, she flees.
A couple days later she finds herself in the small town of Justice, Georgia, to get gas at the same time John Nightwalker is filling up his vehicle. Upon seeing Alicia he gets that feeling in his gut. That feeling that’s been leading him around the world for centuries. He wonders if she might be harboring the soul he is after, but soon realizes that she is simply connected to the man he is after. Attempting to use her to get to him, he helps her fend off the man Richard, her father, sent after her to bring her back home in an attempt to keep her quiet about what she knows.
All this time the story is moving at a fantastic pace. As it progresses it’s not quite as action filled as the prologue managed to be but there are some fantastic moments where bursts of action manage to show off what John is capable of to keep himself and who he cares about safe. After a good burst of action that takes place at John’s Georgia home he realizes that they need to leave for another one of his homes located in the outskirts of Sedona, Arizona. But before making their way west they head north to D.C. to rendezvous with a good friend of John’s, Corbin Woodliff. He’s a reporter who previously won the Pulitzer Prize for his fantastic work in the world of journalism. John knows that if there’s someone out there who can break this story to the world, all while trusting in Alicia’s word of what she heard, it’s him.
Character wise I love that there aren’t too many introduced to where it gets to be tough to keep track. Around the halfway point we have John Nightwalker, Alicia Ponte, Richard Ponte, Jacob Carruthers, Corbin Woodliff, Dieter Bahn, Richard’s right hand man doing his dirty work, and I think that’s about it if I’m remembering correctly. A handful of other standout characters are introduced, such as a sweet lady in Justice, Georgia, who owns the gas station where John and Alicia met, but their presence is short-lived, though pertinent to the story.
After John and Alicia meet with Corbin and manage to dodge a hitman at a hotel they make their way out to Arizona. For a spell we step away from the John and Alicia POVs to focus on Corbin and the detectives he’s working with to break this story wide open. The progression at this point for the story was flawless and fantastic and expertly done by Sharon Sala!! My interest and investment was still just as high as it was at the beginning. I also loved how Sharon frequently managed to jump from one persons POV to another simply with the next paragraph. I can’t recall any other book I’ve read recently in which that sort of thing is done but it worked perfectly in this story!
While in Arizona John struggles with what and what not to tell Alicia about how his immortality came to be and his history. He’s never told anyone about his entire past and life up until this point in time. Whether they were just talking in the kitchen when Alicia was attempting to cook for the first time or growing closer intimately it was still a great way to develop these characters more. Also, I should’ve known given my streak so far of entering this fictional romance realm but I didn’t realize that this book was in that genre! It didn’t at all take away from my enjoyment of the story though! Like I said, it simply helped as far as the character development went.
While in hiding our antagonist, Richard Ponte, with a soul that’s centuries old manages to leave the country and is on the run. His plan to escape and change his identity was pretty freaking smart and as the story progressed I had to laugh thinking about all the traveling the characters manage to do, only to end up close to one another in act three.
I loved how much the past managed to visit John and, in time, Alicia, and even Richard through visions in their dreams. The way these three characters found themselves to be connected by things that happened in the past, and their past lives, in Richards case, was awesome. The way Richard’s soul was betrayed over the course of time while in other bodies, just like how his crew took over in the prologue and betrayed him behind his back, was a great theme to see repeated over the course of his souls past!
When I reached the halfway point I honestly didn’t have a clue what to expect for the back half of the story. I expected what happened around page two hundred to be what would have happened around page four hundred. But with the proper trust in the author and her storytelling it continued to flow brilliantly. Act three was incredibly satisfying and the climax was perfect for the story! I also loved the fact that there was an epilogue. For a story like this and with how the last chapter ended, it was the best way to end the story.
Sharon Sala, you have a new fan!! I had a lot of fun with this story! It was vibrant and came across as close to real as it could get in my imagination. Certain moments, such as descriptions of houses and buildings, weren’t overly detailed like it was in one book I attempted to read a while back. Sometimes less is more when helping the reader paint a picture in their heads. Lay the groundwork and let the characters and actions of what’s happening with the story do the rest. While this story is definitely a standalone, I’d love to see these characters again. Shows how much I loved this story! Thank you for the great read, Sharon!!