"All the pieces of your life came together to bring you to me."
This is the third book in the series, and while it wasn’t my favorite, if you like the idea of finding your fated mate, the one you’re supposed to spend your life with, then I guarantee you’ll love this book.
"When he looked at her…it was like he saw everything. Every pore, every vein, every muscle. But more importantly, every thought and wish."
It’s really hard not to love Holden. He kind of makes it impossible. I love his protective streak, which clearly comes not only from his job but also from the connection he has with Leya. I love that he would gladly take a bullet for her. For them.
"Strong. Vibrant. Leya."
Leya was harder for me. On the one hand, I loved reading more about her culture, and I love the way she is. On the other hand, she read like an 18–20-year-old. She wasn’t very mature, she seemed flighty at times, and she was too sheltered. I found it hard to believe her age.
"A job. The protectee. The person he’d give his life for but not someone he’d lose everything for."
Holden is the Secret Service agent assigned to protect Leya, the vice president’s daughter, so he’s not supposed to catch feelings. Neither is she. She’s his charge, and he’s her protector. But they’ve grown accustomed to being together, and while they banter all the time, there are feelings there. Lust and chemistry? Yes, of course. But also more than that.
"I can’t do that. I can’t protect you if you keep looking at me like that."
"Maybe protection isn’t what I need,"
When Leya needs to run away because she’s being targeted for her heritage, Holden is there for her, just like he’s always been. And their close proximity is going to make it so much harder for them to pretend that nothing’s happening, even though they’re aware they shouldn’t and that the repercussions can be serious for both of them.
"He only cared about the soft gasp that escaped her as he swooped back in to take every single breath she gave. They were his. He was never giving them back."
I feel like I need to mention that the book is absolutely, 100% slow burn, and it only has one sex scene—which is very tame—at around 90%. If you’re into steamier books, this may not be for you.
I also had an issue with the suspense part of the book. I needed suspension of disbelief to be able to read it because some of it felt absolutely far-fetched to me, unlike previous LJ Evans books.
"You. Me. That’s all that matters. Not what others label us. Not what our parents think. Not our jobs, or where we live, or who the media thinks we are. Just us."
That being said, I loved the two of them together. I loved it when they were able to forget who they were for a while and pretend like they were someone else with a simpler life. I loved how connected they were. I’m a firm believer in soulmates, so I think it helped me love their story.
"There is only you. For the rest of my life. For all my next lives. Until time stops."
Their HEA was beautiful. Two totally different people, with two very different cultures and backgrounds coming together simply because of love. It just goes to show what love can do if you let it.