Seventeen years after a nameless young girl became Iris Silas-Lyall, the hybrid Queen of Wolves and Vampires, a new adventure begins. Her daughter, Daisy, led an idyllic childhood under the love and care of her family. But Daisy's fairytale life is ruined when a mysterious plague sweeps across the land, threatening her father's life. It'll be up to Daisy and her friends to stop the evil from spreading across their home as old friends and new foes collide. Evil magic, hungry shadows, and ancient heartbreak could destroy the hard-earned peace of Silvertooth Peaks. This time, not even the Goddess can save them. But things are never black and white, and when Daisy meets Bastian Stone, a strange wolf with a haunted past, passion blurs the line between heroes and villains. Bastian would do anything to protect Daisy, but what exactly is he protecting her from? Daisy learned from her mother to always find the light in even the darkest situations. But what if the answers don't lie in the light? What if Daisy is drawn to the dark? And what if the darkness is drawn to her in return?
So, a little bummed I figured out several key pieces of the story, but that did not take away from the enjoyment of it. The story had a satisfying conclusion and the tension filled in the spaces between the action. There were a few loose ends I was hoping would be tied up that are still up in the air, but we can infer those resolutions based on the actions during each story in this trilogy, and those loose ends do not detract from the adventure's end. I enjoyed how Daisy's and Bastian's journey of discovering themselves and each other continued to grow throughout this final section. This was another enjoyable quest from the author to just get away somewhere else for a while without the constant prolific intimacy that seems to overpower some werewolf novels.