Duty and honor had anchored his life, but only truth could set him free.
Devotion to duty and dogged determination make Tribune Titianus the most feared investigator of the Urban Cohort. Honor drives him to hunt down anyone who breaks Roman law, but it becomes personal when Lenaeus, his old tutor, is murdered in his own classroom. Why kill a respected teacher of the noble sons of Rome, a man who has nothing worth stealing and no known enemies? Had he learned something too dangerous to let him live?
Pompeia was only a girl when Titianus studied with Father before her family became Christians. She and her brother Kaeso can’t move their school from the house where their father was killed. But what if the one who killed Father comes to kill again? Kaeso’s friend Septimus insists they spend nights at his father’s well-guarded home. But danger lurks there as well. As Titianus hunts for the murderer, will he discover their secret faith and arrest them as enemies of the Empire?
When Titianus gets too close to finding the killer, the hunter becomes the hunted. While he recovers at his cousin Septimus’s house, Pompeia becomes the first woman to touch his heart. But a tribune’s loyalty is sworn to Rome, no matter how he feels. When her faith is revealed, will truth and love mean more to him than honor? Does honor require more than devotion to Rome?
Dangerous times, difficult friendships, lives transformed by forgiveness and love
More Than Honor is the tenth volume in the Light in the Empire series, which follows the interconnected lives of six Roman families during the reigns of Trajan and Hadrian. Each can be read stand-alone. The twelve novels of the series will take you around the Empire, from Germania and Britannia to Thracia, Dacia, and Judaea and, of course, to Rome itself.
Another fantastic post-Biblical historical fiction from Carol Ashby! This one follows Tribune Titianus as he attempts to solve the mystery of who burned down a warehouse with a dead man inside that continues to turn up dead bodies and assassination attempts.
— Amazon reviewer
This was my first Carol Ashby book and I really enjoyed it. Carol is a wonderful writer. I got caught up in the story and wanted to find out what happened at the end. I also fell fast in love with the characters, especially Titus Titianus.
— Amazon reviewer
Carol Ashby is one of my favorite Christian fiction writers. Ashby’s research into and explanation of Roman culture in and around Rome after Christ’s death, in an era when Christ followers could and were killed for sport, is extraordinary. Ashby paints a beautifully-woven word picture, careful to explain the minutest detail so that her readers can conceptualize the people and places of this time with little effort.
— Amazon reviewer