Prussia has finally learned the cost of loving the wrong man. In the wake of her broken heart, Prussia must find a way to survive - again. With the help of Tommy, her only human companion, Prussia must choose between the answers of her past and her future safety. But with the clock ticking and the threat of death around every corner in the dangerous political atmosphere of the court of vampire royalty - she may not have much choice as her Queen Victoria continues to move pieces on the board. Prussia must choose - escape the very real possibility of an eternity of vicious torture or push for answers on what she has become. The wrong choice would mean something worse than death...much worse.
Just like with the first two Prussia books, author Karisha Prescott has blown me away, again! It looks like I'm really in for a big treat with this series, I don't know how will I ever stop reading about the immortal vampire-human princess slash Chancellor that is Prussia.
In the third book, Sebastian and Prussia were finally married, witnessed by the entire vampire clan, questioned by the non-believers. But the exciting part was - Prussia discovered that her blood contained virus that is lethal and deadly to the vampire. A deeply & ravenously hungry vampire drinking all of Prussia's blood with all his might will soon be doomed and find himself burned to ashes and face eternal death. That's what Prussia was all about. And that's going to be her secret weapon should her foes and enemies come and kill her.
As expected there is death lurking among the shadows of the castle. A death that will bring forth another kingdom of vampires led by Queen Victoria's evil sister, the other Queen, Patricia. Will there be war? Will there be forgiveness in the end?
I was finally informed that this is a love story, but there was no build up to it. They just suddenly are madly in love. I was again distracted by run on sentences, poor editing, and inconsistent formatting.
I really want to like this story. Very, very badly, but I just can't get over how things jump around with little to no build up or foreshadowing.