Doesn't speak well for Ian's sense of honor, loyalty, or respect
Ick! Ian sank to a new level of low by having carnal knowledge of both his fated mate and that mate's twin, who, even worse, turned out to be his Beta's/best friend's fated mate. While fate/destiny/life happens as it may, personal actions guide end results, and Ian was nothing but selfish, nasty and cruel to people who deserved, at minimum, decent treatment, especially Breaker, who would have given Fisk to Ian had he but truly wanted him. In this book, Ian continues as the spoiled malcontent he portrayed in book 3, only he knows it isn't right, and he knows Seb doesn't deserve such dishonorable treatment. His cavalier carelessness with other people's feelings completely out me off this book, and I skipped around to catch bits and pieces until Seb got the happy ending he richly deserved. Circumstances placed him and his twin in the dire straits they were forced into, and while they deserved strong, honest mates who could take care of them, NO ONE deserves to be manipulated, or taken advantage of, especially sexually, even if it was done prior to Ian's awareness, recognition, and acceptance of Sebastian as his mate.
I just could not enjoy the past two books - I guess I simply do not like Ian. The author could have set this up differently - I find it difficult to believe any self-respecting individual - in this case two identical individuals - would accept Ian's behavior. I also don't buy Breaker's calm forgiveness. The knowledge that my man got it on with my best friend before, DURING AND AFTER our own relationship would KILL any commitment. Period. Unrealistic, dreadful theme. 1/2 star.