I think I was more-than-usually excited to begin this fifth book in a series that has gripped me from the first page of the first book. The slow revelations from the author about this world she has created have left me insufferably curious about where she is going to take it. Are the shifters and humans ever going to restore some balance between their species? A balance that doesn't require the shifters living in crowded enclaves, forced to have curfews, shamed into wearing a yellow cloth on their collars when they leave their gates, and refused access to decent medical care, much less any professional training and education. The events in the last four books with their mesmerizing omegas (Jason, Baxter, Holland, Bram, and Cale) have begun a slow start to perhaps changing some of the human rules and getting the shifters more equality, so it was with bated breath that I began Garrick and Laine’s story. Not to mention I also was really hoping more would be revealed about True Omegas and their history within packs.
Garrick is a shifter, a member of the Mercy Hills Pack, and he has a law degree. Of course, as a shifter he is refused the right to sit for the bar exam and that is just one of the many discriminations shifters deal with. Lainey is a human lawyer who has been working with the pack and Garrick since the issues regarding Jason’s former pack arose in book one. It hasn't been too long ago that Garrick and Laine started a personal and physical relationship - something that isn't looked upon favorably by either humans or shifters. In fact, Holland has asked Garrick not to spend any more nights at Laine’s place, but Garrick has his own secret, kept from his whole pack, that ensures he will never get involved with a shifter.
Garrick often wonders how Laine can remain so clueless about the realities of the world they live in when he's a criminal defense attorney. Laine wants to think that, on average, humans are good and are willing to give shifters the benefit of the doubt, but Garrick knows this isn't so. Sure, they've made some strides in the last few years, but that definitely doesn't mean that humans are ready to take the walls around the enclaves down. Granted, Quin, Holland, and Garrick travel to Washington D.C. to meet with the president and his constitutional lawyer to start discussing the shifter short and long-term goals. Even more remarkable than all of this, however, is the man they meet there and the story he shares which I'm not talking about because it's a huge spoiler.
It takes an emergency, though, for Laine to finally see what he has blissfully ignored, or just not bothered to understand. Quin, Holland, and Duke certainly wake him up to the realities of the pack’s feelings about him, although Holland softens a little once he realizes the true depths of Laine’s feelings for Garrick. Garrick is at fault here, too, as he has never really explained to Laine about pack life, politics, their sense of family, and Laine is, for all intents and purposes, an alpha in a human body. So, Laine doesn't understand the underlying emotions, body language, etc. from Quin and the other alphas.
“Quin said to him, “What you’re doing isn’t fair to him. He can’t live half in, half out of the pack. You can’t ask that of him.”
Laine turned and stared thoughtfully at Quin for a moment, then he patted the hand on his arm. “I don’t. But what are you asking of him? To be a shadow of what he’s meant to be, because it’s easier for you? If you can’t fight for his right to be what he trained so hard for, I will. And if he wants to stay entirely inside the pack after, I’ll fight for that right too.” And then he left, and we all stared at each other in silence.”
An extremely exciting addition to the series that revealed more information about the history of omegas and the history of the packs, in general, after the enclaves were instituted. Laine and Garrick’s romance is a running storyline throughout but it tends to take a backseat, more than once, to the changes beginning for the Mercy Hills Pack, its omegas, and shifter society at large. I really liked the way the author wrote the ending and I'm eagerly anticipating the next installment.