This is the final book in this series and one that expands on the relationship between Stefan and Marcelle, a pairing that is unlikely on many levels but in spite of lots of factors, seemed to be working. That is, until Stefan's enemies--going all the way back to the initial attack that brought Stefan and Marcelle together in book one--have now abducted Marcelle and her experience being the object of torture forms the first part of the book. The second half is the fall-out as it affects Marcelle's recovery and the relationship between these two very intense and troubled couple. Marcelle's experience has caused a lot of Stefan's deeply buried angst and life-experience related trauma to surface more than it ever has as his sense of guilt never seems to be ameliorated by anything or anyone. I felt the ending was just a bit abrupt--don't ask my why I get that feeling. Perhaps it is my own experience as a helping professional that didn't feel that the resolution was as realistic as some of the other aspects of the story. Yet overall, it is a fine book and well-written, with a good flow to the story. Readers should not get impatient with the main characters because the kind of trauma they have both endured at the hands of terrorists doesn't make for easy reading or for easy resolutions, either. Probably the most riveting of the three books.