XIII century.
The young Giselbert, lord of an Austrian county in the middle of the Alps, abandons his belongings and rides, under a false name, to the Moravian lands. The locals soon recognize his noble origin, secretly linked to an obscure past, which pushed the count very far away. A series of odd coincidences ties together the villages of Veilchenburg and Lubenice, so similar and so different from each other. Florian, count of Lubenice, is willing to help Giselbert find a new life, while preparing for a battle against the Mongol invasors.
But all of this is just a facade of all the mystery behind the legend. A third person, whose name is not known, seems to be stranger than everyone else. They may be the reason why the whole legend has two different endings, as if history itself got changed by a little.
It's a maze of symbolisms and hidden meanings, a mirror on the world of multi-personality and memories of possible past lives. Could be a fight between good and bad, but blurred out to a point where one can't see anymore what's the good and what's the bad, since both are mere human concepts.
(This book was originally written by me in my native language, Italian, and I chose to translate it myself. If you encounter some mistakes, it'd be very kind of you to point them out!)
I wish you a good reading, hoping to update this book as consistently as possible!
In the thrilling third installment of 'Agents of Time', the time travel team is on the hunt for Jack the Ripper - the unidentified serial killer notorious for his murders in Whitechapel in 1888.
Season 3 of Agents of Time
***
As secrets and suspicions rise in the academy, the agents aren't too keen on obeying the director's orders this time...and June's feelings for the charming Theo are causing a distraction. With the help of Ryan and former time travel agent Landon, the team must figure out what the directors are up to and stop them before it's too late. In the process, they will be faced with their most dangerous mission yet: And as always, nothing is as it seems.