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302 pages, Kindle Edition
First published June 28, 2016



He must be an opium addict. Or if not opium, some other potent substance that made his veins glow. The watch was a clever device that hid the stubstance in liquid form. It likely also hid a tiny syringe that he used to inject the liquid into himself as he held the watch in his palm[...]
Clearly the device had stopped working properly and so he needed the original maker to fix it. I'd never seen such a watch before, so it most likely required special care. I hadn't yet worked out why he couldn't inject the substance into himself without using the watch, but there must be a reason.


DNF @ 78%
Started out very intriguing but the book has too many plot holes, plot armor, and flat characters. Then, the heroine developed into a tstl character.
A few obvious plot holes:
1. The heroine, India Steele, is described in the beginning as an uninspiring 27 year-old spinster who has never had any suitor except for the recent fiancé who duped her. Then later, we're told that she's too beautiful to find employment as a governess because the wives are wary that her beauty will seduce their husbands. It's convenient for the author to place the heroine as a plain girl in the beginning of the story and then there's another convenient moment that says she's beyond beautiful to keep her from finding employment elsewhere except only at Matthew Glass' employ? Plot holes much?
2. We're shown that Matt disappears for hours to rejuvenate from his exhaustion but then it's revealed through India's spying that it only takes a couple of minute for the magic watch to rejuvenate him. Inconsistencies again?
Then there's also India's too stupid to live character:
1. She's too judgmental of her own friends and too naive toward her enemies. She constantly disbelieves Matt, who has never once acted against her welfare, but is too willing to believe her enemies, who has consistently shown to do her harm and lie to her.
2. India's dead set to betray Matt because she thinks he's dangerous outlaw out to kill her despite Matt's numerous acts to save her from her predicament and defend her against harm from her enemies. Yet, India easily brushes this off and believes more in the safety of a stranger she met in a shady gambling house with pretty blue eyes than Matt's. She needs her head check.
3. Matt hires India for her services to help him find a special watchmaker. Yet, India acts like she's an entitled princess that can do whatever she wants with her time. There's one moment where she tells Matt he can't tell her what to do or where to go... Um no? He's her employer and she's, in every other sense, Matt's assistant, so he has every right to dictate her job duties. Without Matt, she'll be unemployed and without housing.
The writing itself is well done but plot has too many holes and the characters (not just the heroine but also the hero and side characters), where at first they were very likeable, develop into imebeciles.

