


It wasn’t that this book was bad per-se but it wasn’t what I was expecting either. I was expecting a little more adventure and high fantasy. But there are still a whole lot of unanswered questions and Bryn is far from getting the revenge she so desperately wants on Konstantin or will she lose something far more precious, like her heart? After a brief altercation, Konstantin gets away.įearing the worst for Linus, she grabs him early and takes him back to Kanin where he will be returned safely to his biological family. She confronts the car and discovers Konstantin and his accomplice, Bent, also tracking Linus. While she is on the Linus assignment, she notices a car tailing him that is not part of her operation. Bryn is out on a tracker assignment to a higher up changeling, Linus, who is next in long for the Kanin throne. Luckily he survives and Bryn goes on to complete her tracker education.įour years go by without any word from Konstantin. He flees and Bryn is left with her father who has sustained serious injuries. She rushed into a room and sees Konstantin brutally attack and stab her father.īefore Bryn can stop him, Konstantin mutters an apology but he is bound by something higher than the kingdoms and that he must complete his mission. Konstantin begs Bryn’s father to sign some papers briefly before returning home, Bryn says she will wait for him when she suddenly hears him cry out.

One night after her first duty as a tracker, Bryn and her father run into Konstantin Black, the youngest and most notorious Hogdragen serving the Queen. Her father is the Chancellor of the Kanin people, who serves the King. She has always wanted to be a Hogdragen, an elite trained group of trackers and guards who serve the royals.

Her job is to take and bring back changelings to Kanin. It sounded like an interesting premise and an easy read so why not?īryn Aven is a tracker. I am in cover lust over this novel, that’s why I picked it up….plus I heard some good reviews about this book so I downloaded it before going on vacation.
