One Dark Window by Rachel Gillig
If I’d checked Amazon, probably I would have learned everything I needed to know about Rachel Gillig’s 2022 fantasy novel One Dark Window. It was a BookTok sensation. I can probably stop there.
One Dark Window is the first of a Duology, the SHEPHERD KING series, a second-world fantasy, or romantasy, actually, since much of our protagonist Elspeth’s time is spent wondering if Ravyn, the grouchy nephew of the king, really likes her, and if she really likes him.
To be fair, Elspeth has plenty of other things to worry about. She is infected with magic, a fact that has been hidden from the king and the king’s enforcers, the Destriers, of which Ravyn is the leader. Infection is a death sentence in the country of Blunder—not merely a slow death from the magic, but execution, if an infected person is discovered.
My favorite part of this series was the magical system and the use of illustrated Providence cards, a cross between Tarot cards and trading cards, to harness and control magic. There are seventy-eight cards in total, bargained for and created by the Shepherd King five hundred years ago. Each card holds a certain kind of magic, which can be activated by the card’s holder. Most cards are multiples—there is one singleton, the Two Alders. With an entire set, including the elusive Two Alders, a person could end the infection for everyone, but no one has found that card.
The mist that steadily infiltrates blunder is filled with magic, and people who linger in it can become infected with illegal magic. They manifest powers but pay a terrible price. In Elspeth’s case, she can see Providence cards, even if they’re physically hidden, by the “glow” of the card. She also absorbs the magic of any card she touches. When she was a child, she touched one of the two Nightmare cards, and the Nightmare in it now shares her headspace. Nightmare is a monster, but a complicated one.
Ravyn is the leader of the group who identifies and rounds up infected people; he is also a criminal, a highwayman, dedicated to collecting the whole set of Providence cards, which means stealing them. With the complete set, his family can cure Ravyn’s younger brother Emory. Of course this means finding the Two Alders, which no one’s been able to do for five hundred years. No one had Elspeth and Nightmare before, either, though.
I like the interaction between Nightmare and Elspeth, and I really liked Ione, Elspeth’s cousin. Ione’s story arc, as she goes under the influence of the Maiden card, was more interesting to me than the conspiracies, schemes, and bickering of two royal families. While the stakes seem pretty high, a few scenes read more to me like Elspeth sat down at the Popular Kids’ table in the school cafeteria by mistake. Lush visual descriptions were a bonus, and forays into the forest at night as Elspeth and Ravyn plan to steal Providence cards (why do groups with valuables travel through the deadly forest at night? I don’t know,) were heady and atmospheric.
It’s clear I’m not the intended audience for this story, but it was pleasant enough, and I liked it enough to buy the sequel, Two Twisted Crowns, which came out in October, 2023. Romantasy readers and RPGers will probably love the vibe of these books.
But nothing comes for free, especially magic.
When Elspeth meets a mysterious highwayman on the forest road, her life takes a drastic turn. Thrust into a world of shadow and deception, she joins a dangerous quest to cure the kingdom of the dark magic infecting it. Except the highwayman just so happens to be the King’s own nephew, Captain of the Destriers…and guilty of high treason.
He and Elspeth have until Solstice to gather twelve Providence Cards—the keys to the cure. But as the stakes heighten and their undeniable attraction intensifies, Elspeth is forced to face her darkest secret yet: the Nightmare is slowly, darkly, taking over her mind. And she might not be able to stop him.
I read these books based on the “fans of For the Wolf” and did not realize it was a BookTok book before I got into it. I tend to skip over BookTok books. I wasn’t actually a fan of For the Wolf either, but I wanted to be and it disappointed me that I just didn’t like it. Anyway, I gave this and it’s sequel a try. I did end up liking the duology, mostly because I really did love the magic providence cards. It’s not something I’ve read a lot of so it was new and interesting. There did seem to be some wasted potential here. I also wanted to know what was going on beyond the mist, but I guess that would have been a lot for 2 books. I agree that Ione’s arc was well done.