**Background - Many, many years ago, a group was discovered on another continent, a group unlike any the man had seen before. That man relocated them to his home in Scotland and they were never heard of again.**
As the years went by things changed for the group, as well as expanding with new additions, and when current members realized things weren't as they should be, they made a plan. However, that plan resulted in some consequences they didn't see coming. To make things right, Jake, the leader, decides to get the answers they need, there's only one thing to do...they need a bargaining chip to see where the Colonel stands. They also want to discover their origins, where they came from, any information about their lives, information that has never been shared with them.
Christa, the Colonel's daughter, sees only the good in people. The Colonel knows his kind-hearted daughter could never understand some of the decisions he's made, nor his need for power that started him on this journey and has ensured she isn't aware of them. However, he can't control everything or everyone and regardless of the steps he's taken to keep the two sides of his life separate, unfortunately for Christa, they're about to collide with her right in the center of it.
"He fu@&ing loved being in her mind. She was like no one he’d ever encountered before. He loved hearing her quirky thoughts." - Jake
As the pull to be near Christa becomes harder and harder to resist, Jake is torn between what he's coming to crave where she's concerned and his responsibility to his chosen family. As Jake and his team work to free the others and discover all they can about themselves, it seems someone is eliminating anyone in the know about the group. That could mean the Colonel is in danger. Even though they don't trust him, he is working with them as a necessity to keep Christa safe. But what happens when the Colonel learns Christa is specifically being targeted as well?
Will Jake find the members of family that were taken hostage? Will he find the other missing members as well? Can the Colonel be trusted? Who is behind what's happening? Is the same person or people responsible for everything? Or are there more players involved than Jake is aware of? What happens when Christa learns the other secrets her Dad is keeping, ones that specifically involve her? Will Jake and Christa get a chance at a future together?
One-click now to find out the story behind the Tribe, as they're referred to, and discover what they're up against as they try to uncover the truth about their beginnings. Please keep in mind while the book does let us know there is a future for Jake and Christa, the plot is in no way resolved and will continue on in book two. I did find the premise unique and am curious to see how the story will continue.
I do have to say on a side note, there were a couple of things that irritated me and while this is purely a personal preference on my part, I did want to share what they were. First, and this happened very early on in the story and then colored my enjoyment of the remainder of the story. I may have eventually been able to forget about it, but then it was referred to again, therefore refreshing my memory and irritating me all over again. Jake, Quinn, and Rose are traveling to their destination and a comment is made by Quinn, essentially telling Jake he's too tense and needs to get laid. Rose then offers herself up to have sex with him, saying she'd take one for the team. No. Just no. I do not want to have another character offer to have sex with the hero. Then she later referred to her offer again and said Jake should've taken her up on it. (This is after Jake and Christa have met and it's obvious to all the members present that they're attracted to each other and the team disapproves.) Now both times nothing happens between them and we are told that not only has nothing ever happened between them, but that Jake views her, and all the other members, as family and has never thought of the female members that way. Which brings me to my second irritation. I find it icky that she would offer to have sex with him, twice, when they've become family to each other. Third, we have Jake's mental thinking of how it's been three months since he last had sex. Oh no, the horror of it all, right? I hate when it's done like that. It's been three months...which equates to it being forever ago...ugh. Why do people feel the male characters have to essentially be manwhores or they constantly need sex or have just had it recently? There is nothing wrong with a man that isn't like that. In all honesty, that man is more of a hero in my eyes. The fourth and final thing, it got really old really fast that every woman Jake came into contact with, minus the female Tribe members and not including Rose's offer, either flat out flirted with him, mentally thought about him and what they'd like to do to him (psst...he can read minds so we were given this information.), or was obvious in checking him out. We get it, he's hot. That doesn't mean that no woman could be in his vicinity without it impacting her. I didn't feel any of these were necessary nor did they add to the story. In fact, they detracted from it for me.
**I received a copy of this book from Entangled Publishing via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.**