Sorry but I hated everything about this book. The direction it went in, the pacing, the writing, the utter convenience of the "fates" things, the dialogue, the ending, the characterisation (particularly of Ezzo), and - because I'm already mad - how once again the queer characters are side characters only.
Ezzo - what do you MEAN he turned to alcoholism to cope with Eve's death, bordering on being suicidal, only for him to seemingly be completed cured of his grief because of a hateful college student he has known for two days?? Oh, sorry, forgot that he had a hallucination/dream/vision of his dead love giving him permission to get with Raya. Just...WHAT??
And don't even get me started on how Raya has just been so severely traumatised by something she blames Ezzo for entirely, but she is also completely over it within a few hours. But maybe she's just like that. This is her thought process: "I am going to go after this guy! Wait, I know he has a scary Gold with him who can and will steal my magic, I know he will steal my magic because Hues are evil and bad! OMG I can't believe you guys acted evil and bad and handcuffed me to a metal pipe and stole my magic, I will never forgive you >:( You, whom I have hated since I saw you because I am racist and misinformed, so I already saw you as a villain, but HOW DARE YOU PROVE ME RIGHT. Actually, I have now forgotten about that, hey Ezzo is kind of hot, isn't he?" I did like her to start with, I sympathised with her situation and circumstances, but then she did the above and I just thought "girl nah". And then everything she did after that PMO.
I didn't like the plot anyway. There was mention of how it's not just coincidence that two similar events have happened within two years of each other but first of all, how convenient that it happened to the same people as well. Secondly, it feels very "villain of the week" regardless. And I don't wanna hear about how "it was decided by fate". "Fate" is my least favourite reason for things happening in fiction, because, I'm sorry, it's just a weak excuse and a cop-out. Yes, even when dealing with seers.
Anyway, I didn't like the plot, but it at least would have been good if the characters were making any sense at all or behaving in ways that were even slightly realistic. It would have been good if more chapters had been dedicated to fleshing their relationships out, and allowing a sensible amount of time to pass so that it's in any way believable that Ezzo and Raya would fall for each other. I would have also liked it if the writing hadn't been following the same formula every few paragraphs, but I knew as soon as I saw my pet peeve from book 1 that it was not to be (pet peeve being when every other paragraph starts with an italicised inner thought from the character who is thinking to themselves as if they are having a conversation with the narrator in their head ffs: this is probably fine if only one character is doing it, it's like their Thing, but no. Every character does it in both books, and I hate it).
Anyway, RIP Ezzo, I liked you once upon a time. Now you've irritated me.