This was beyond tedious. Jewel isn't a bad writer--I can understand why people like her--but I didn't like this book at all. I wasn't too big on the previous one, either, but I felt disappointed by how dull I found this book given it had so many things I love in a romance. Unrequited love: Fenris has been in love with Eugenia since she married her late husband, his former best friend. Enemies-to-lovers: I knew from the first book that she hates him because he apparently tried to stop her husband from marrying her and was cruel somehow. This led to his friend never talking to him again, something Fenris deeply regrets, especially since Robert passed away. And a grieving widow learning to love again: Eugenia was widowed young 4 years ago and has just started wearing colors again and going to social functions, mostly due to her best friend, Lily, meeting and falling in love with Eugenia's older brother in the previous book.
Fenris was presented as a bit of a villain in the previous book not because of anything we see him do, but because Lily (heroine of first book) and Eugenia assume he has the worst intentions. Lily is his cousin and she is scared Fenris and his father want to try to take her fortune. The duke is her uncle and iirc, cut off contact with Lily's mother (his sister) when she married Lily's father. However, Fenris introduces himself and says he wants to make peace and learn to know Lily as a member of his family. He's clearly in love with Eugenia but knows she despises him.
None of this is necessary information to read this book, but for me, it made Eugenia's behavior toward him frustrating because her animosity felt unwarranted. And this isn't helped by the fact that whatever he did in the past is never really explained fully. All we know is he called her a "blowsy girl" and despite falling in love with her right away, acted as if she were beneath him and his friend, Robert. When he saw them falling in love, apparently he tried to stop Robert from marrying her. I don't actually know what he did or said to make Robert stop talking to him, but Fenris only has good things to say about his former friend and misses him greatly. I honestly think a flashback scene or two could've improved this aspect of the book immensely.
Eugenia hasn't warmed up to him in the intervening years and assumes he's still a snob who hates her, even though he gives her no reason to think this. While I tried to remember she's been so blinded by grief that she's not been fully "living," I still didn't understand how she was so oblivious for good portions of this book. Oblivious about his feelings for her and in denial about them for almost the entirety of the book despite the fact that he tells her he's in love with her. Also oblivious to the feelings her friend, a young woman for whom she's acting as chaperone, develops for Fenris's father. This is a secondary romance that I found more interesting than the main romance, even though we don't see anything more than friendship on the page. But Eugenia is insistent that the duke only thinks of her friend as the daughter he never had even though it's obviously it's not the case.
I could forgive some of this if I hadn't been bored to death by most of this book. Fenris and Eugenia become intimate very early on, which felt out of character for Eugenia. Even as they have sex for the first time, she tells him he'll never compare to her late husband, he'll never win her heart, and she hates him. I guess it's supposed to be hate sex, but as a reader, I just felt like it was a mess. And then this sex scene dragged on for what felt like 50 chapters and it was awkward as hell. The hero keeps promising a "quick fuck" or a "hard fuck" and she loves his cock and he'd shave her vagina and write on her in purple ink??? Gag me. I love dirty talk in a romance but this felt so forced. Like I was supposed to find their encounters incredibly erotic instead of patently ridiculous. Fenris can give the grieving widow multiple screaming orgasms and fuck for pages and pages and PAGES. I was like...are y'all done yet??? And then she gives him the cold shoulder and says she hates him and they have sex again.
I don't usually complain about too much sex in books but my god the final 40% was nothing but sex, argue, sex, cold shoulder, sex, a duel thrown in, sex, hero tells her repeatedly he loves her and will do anything for her and she still muses whether he has a mistress when she's not with him (wtf??? first off his dick would fall off at that rate and second there's ZERO REASON TO THINK THIS). Oh, and more sex. She realizes she loves him during sex, of course.
Frankly, given we never see their interactions when he first falls in love with her a decade before the book starts, and given how she behaves toward him in the book, I never understood what he saw in Eugenia. And since she can't stop thinking about or comparing him to her husband as late as like 90%+ into the book, I never believed that she was actually in love with Fenris. Just liked having lots of sex.
Oh. And one last thing. We learn in passing that Robert was disabled somehow. He is referred to, at turns, as having been crippled, deformed, and of a "deficient body." I realize this book was supposed to take place at a time when people spoke about disabilities differently but fucking hell, I was so disgusted by the language used to describe him.