A gripping story that kept me on tenterhooks the whole time. Fast-paced and, in parts, action-packed, but also angsty, resonant, and so, so rich.
Keefe set herself a difficult task: getting us to care about a relationship in which one MC, Adrio, is cruel, snide, and distant -- and, as the non-POV character, almost completely inaccessible to the reader -- while our narrator, Cay, is baffled, heartsick, and stranded in a marriage suddenly turned sour, but also secretive and prone to rash decisions. In the main narrative, we are experiencing Adrio's jabs and malice through two layers of confusion: Cay's lack of mastery of the obtuse, courtly "starlight conversation" which Adrio uses to code his disdain; and more fundamentally, Cay's lack of understanding of why his new husband suddenly, with no explanation, rejected him, in stark contrast to their brief but ardent courtship (which we get in concise, melancholy-tinged flashbacks). Cay knows he has lost his husband's love, but he doesn't know why. And despite himself, he still loves Adrio, and despises his own weakness in clinging to this love. Cay is a survivor through and through, but he is also almost entirely alienated: living in the house of his rich, noble husband who hates him; barely accepted by the society in which they move, who see only his history as a poor refugee and tradesman; possessed of only a single confidant, Ondrei, who is nonetheless unblinkingly loyal to Adrio, his longtime friend; and even distanced from his brilliant, beloved younger sister, Kell, who has a genuine, mutually affectionate friendship with Adrio which Cay is loathe to betray. Living in luxury but trapped by circumstance and protective of his secrets, Cay is ripe to be preyed upon by an envoy/ spy sent by the evil regime of his former homeland -- and it is this spy's machinations and threats that set the plot in motion.
This book thus lives and dies on whether the Cay-Adrio relationship can be believably salvaged and rehabilitated. Adrio has a huge hill to climb for the reader to understand why he acted as he did and be willing to forgive him. A lesser author wouldn't manage it, or would drag out the mis/non-communication and obstacles to the point that there's no reason to root for these two in the first place. But Keefe deftly guides us through these emotional rapids. The first major confrontation between Adrio and Cay, where we finally start to piece together some of what's been going on (mostly from Adrio's side; Cay keeps his secrets from us, too), is enraging, frustrating, and masterfully done. And, crucially, it is followed up by a fantastic scene with an incensed Kell, in which yet more pieces come to light -- information that Cay, in despair and hopelessness, withheld from a husband who no longer cared to hear. Finally, Adrio is forced to question his own assumptions and behavior, and start reckoning with the harm he's caused. But the path to reconciliation is not an easy one, and this, too, is crucial: Cay is no pushover and not one to let Adrio easily off the hook. Cay acknowledges that his secrets had costs, but recognizing this does not absolve Adrio for his actions. Cay must thus reckon with what he is able to forgive, and whether what's left is enough to, not just save, but build upon and make whole. All of this is woven in with meditations on honor, trust, and what we do to survive -- meditations that are rooted in Adrio and Cay's characters and actions, so that they feel integral and explanatory to why they behaved as they did.
Note, however, that I'm not kidding when I said that Adrio really is horrible for a good chunk of the book. This includes a scene that is not technically dubcon, but is incredibly hard to read for the way Adrio treats Cay and how Cay is affected. Again: this book sets itself a tough task, and only works if you believe Adrio is, ultimately, forgivable -- including for a scene that can only be described as vengeance sex. Proceed with caution.
But I genuinely hope that this book finds a lot of readers, for there is so much to delight in here. I adored its cleverness, its integrity, its colorful world, its challenge, its heart. One of my most compelling reads of the year thus far, and a real gem.
I got an ARC from GRR in exchange for an honest review.