“The one thing you will learn, little witch, is that I rarely follow the King’s command.”
There’s no room for witches in Tray’s world.
Two of his brothers have been seduced, battle lines are now blurred. Who is the lover and who is the foe.
But Tray doesn’t do love, which makes him the only one positioned to save his brothers from their fate. He kidnaps the weakest, Dami, and hides her in the Fae village, determined to make her pay for her sisters’ crimes.
Dami and Tray's relationship has a little more of the tension missing in the first two books. Witch and Fae are coming to understanding each other a little more and in this book we are let into more of the plot and events to come. I am enjoying this series and especially appreciating the way the writers are trying to improve what they give us as readers. It is obvious that reader connection is a big aspect of their writing. It shows in the way we begin to see the opposing sides in a better light and want to see it through with them. Tray really reaches out to be understood and our common thread character is beginning to rise and be noticed There is still quite a lot of fine tuning to be done in ensuring readers follow the plot a little easier. Sometimes the flow is too long in sections and it is easy to lose track of what the writer wants us to know. A stronger edit would make this series pop. As it is I am waiting for the next one which is why I gave it a four star. It might have faults but it gets me in.