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LEGACY: The Eagle
Book I of The Montbard Dynasty
Before Rome conquered Gaul, two philosophies merged into a synthesis that would outlast empires-not in marble halls or on battlefields, but in a sacred valley where East met West, where wisdom learned to survive by adapting rather than resisting.
In 85 BCE, drawn across half the known world by a powerful vision, Master Wei-a warrior-monk from Wudang Mountain-arrives at his destination-a trefnemet of central Gaul, where two rivers meet. There he encounters Diviciacus, a young Gaul whose gift for sagacity will one day reshape the fate of nations.
Their meeting plants a seed that will continue to bloom over many generations: the understanding that true strength lies in uniting opposites-East and West, sword and spirit, wisdom and power-like converging waters creating a new river.
Decades later, that philosophy faces its ultimate test.
59 BCE. Gallic pride collides with Rome's ambition. Publius Sextius Baculus, a battle-scarred centurion and unlikely friend, escorts Diviciacus-now chief and druid of the Aedui-to an audience that will change everything. Before Consul Gaius Julius Caesar, Diviciacus makes an impossible request: save his people from the Helvetii migration threatening to drown their lands.
What begins as a desperate alliance becomes something far more dangerous. Caesar recognizes in Diviciacus not merely a useful ally but a philosopher who sees that power without wisdom is conquest waiting to collapse.
But change fractures even the strongest bonds. Dumnorix, Diviciacus's fiery younger brother, cannot abide submission to Rome. Where his elder sees adaptation, he sees betrayal. In council halls thick with mead and thunder, brother faces brother-not for power, but for the soul of a people. Their debate echoes across every age: How much must be yielded to survive, and how much held sacred to remain oneself?
Between them stands Bardix-son of Diviciacus, witness to both visions, a bridge between worlds. Trained by Master Wei in the Dance of Heaven and Earth, educated in both Roman tactics and Gallic tradition, he becomes the living embodiment of his father's impossible hope.
Yet as Caesar's legions sweep across Gaul-from the blood-red waters of the Arar to the desperate siege of Alesia-Bardix learns that wisdom alone cannot stop the machinery of conquest.
When Caesar falls to senatorial daggers, everything Bardix has built trembles. His protections are gone. Alliances shattered. In the sacred valley where East first met West, the trefnemet must endure-not through Roman favor, but through the strength of an idea older than empire itself.
This is not the triumphal history Caesar recorded. It is the story behind it-the private doubts, divided loyalties, and quiet moments when people realized that victory and loss can share the same breath.
From Bibracte's council fires to Rome's marble chambers, from Master Wei's patient teachings to Vercingetorix's final stand, Legacy: The Eagle reveals how knowledge survives catastrophe, how families fracture under opposing truths, and how the human spirit endures by bending rather than breaking.
For readers who loved Maurice Druon's The Accursed Kings, Colleen McCullough's Masters of Rome, and Ken Follett's Kingsbridge series-historical fiction where philosophy and warfare, family and empire, political intrigue and human cost intertwine with devastating intimacy.
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