Willa Blair's latest Scottish Highlands historical is the deeply satisfying story of a desperate lady laird and an honor-driven master of arms. The pair finds themselves battling divided loyalties, terrifying omens, a ruthless neighboring clan and an impossible passion. Hmm. 16th-century intrigue, muscled men with claymores and a doomed romance — is it any wonder I was reluctant to leave the rich, riveting world of Highland Seer? Good thing I can make my way back easily enough — all I have to do is treat myself to Blair's celebrated debut, Highland Healer. First, though, let me finish extolling the many virtues of this second book in the Highland Talents series. (By the way, though Highland Seer doesn't open the series, it works well as a stand-alone story. But if you're like me, you won't want it to.)
She reached out and took his hand, counting on his reaction to her touch to delay him. "I wish ye'd stay awhile."
The gaze Donal turned on her glinted like an icy pool. The kind that stopped your heart and froze your breath in your lungs. The kind so beautiful in winter that you didn't mind the cold. Suddenly she ached to plunge into those depths— but would he let her? His lips quirked. Fire and ice.
He lifted his free hand to her face and brushed his knuckles gently across her cheek. "I'd like nothin' more, lass. But I canna stay. Ye ken the reason."
Ellie sucked in a breath. His touch sent shivers racing down her spine. "Do I?"
"Ye're no' the sort of lass to dally with a man. Ye want a husband. Ye're a laird in yer own right."
But more than clan status is keeping Donal and Ellie apart. Blair has crafted layer upon layer of conflict so ironclad the story teems with tension and expectancy. Donal feels a fierce loyalty to the Lathans, and has no desire to be away from his clan for even the year Ellie tries to negotiate — especially when it will mean watching her take another man as consort. Ellie is just as devoted to the MacKyries, who are struggling to recover from the clan wars, which means she has no choice but to accept the neighboring Laird's proposal of marriage when he threatens to lay waste to what's left of her village. And throughout it all, Donal refuses to trust in Ellie's Sight — a Sight which adds a dark, mesmerizing edge to the story — I would love to have experienced more of Ellie's visions.
I adored Ellie's courage, as she's refreshingly forthright about her desire for Donal, and Donal's sense of honor will make you swoon. (If his prowess with a sword doesn't already have you in a dead faint.) The romance builds in a slow and gratifying way and the author paces this perfectly, granting Donal and Ellie the time they need to overcome all obstacles to a future together. And of course while she's at it, Blair is also whipping the reader into a frenzy of anticipation! Besides a cast, plot and story rhythm that are nothing short of stimulating, Highland Seer offers up some lovely prose:
A sprawling village puddled out from the base of the walls like a sitting woman's skirt, and a trail meandered through its midst to the keep's open gates.
The Highlands await and the keep's gates are open. I'll see you there!