Angel's Regret
About
The Adversary's Princes think humanity is broken. They are wrong about one thing — and it's going to cost them everything.
Las Vegas is being rebuilt as a weapon.
Beneath the gladiatorial spectacle of the converted Bellagio arena, Prince Bezaliel — one of the Seven fallen angels who carved up a conquered Earth between them — is etching a celestial sigil into the bones of the city. When the blood moon rises, the ritual will sever humanity's last connection to heaven and bind every soul on the continent to the Adversary forever.
Gabrielle has spent months as Bezaliel's prized champion, surviving the arena while the resistance scattered. Now she's the only one inside the wire — and the only one who knows what's coming.
Cade Williams is no longer the Templar Knight he used to be. The Nephilim power growing inside him terrifies Riley, unsettles even Uriel, and threatens to burn away whatever humanity he has left. But it's also the one thing the fallen angels can't see coming. To them, he reads as just another human. A blind spot. A loaded gun they don't know is in the room.
A captured architect dies passing Gabrielle a notebook full of sabotaged blueprints. Seven hidden nodes scattered across the city. One impossible window during the tournament finals. And only a being of both human and angelic essence can flip the ritual back on its maker.
Cade has to walk into Bezaliel's arena disguised as a tournament fighter. Gabrielle has to keep her cover while a shadow demon tracks her every move. Riley has to reach the heart of the architecture before Bezaliel realizes the sabotage isn't human resistance at all — it's something far worse, hiding in plain sight.
When Bezaliel finally sees what Cade truly is, it will be the first regret of his immortal existence.
It will not be the last.
Angel's Regret is the ninth explosive entry in the bestselling Templar Chronicles — a supernatural thriller series of urban fantasy, horror, and battlefield action. Perfect for readers of Larry Correia's Monster Hunter International, Jim Butcher's Dresden Files, and Jonathan Maberry's Joe Ledger novels.