Slipping back into the last story of this quartet was like getting into comfy clothes in front of a fire with a cup of tea. I didn't actually do a series reread before picking this one up, but I can always trust Claudie to put a full outline of what has come in the stories before at the start of these novels.
After that, we pick up right where we left off: Hasryan in pain. And in Lord Allastam's dungeon.
I gotta say, for a cosy series of books with found family making up so many of this diverse cast of characters, there were some of the most memorable and dark bad guys in this book. Lord Allastam is more the guy moving things in the background before this book, but he definitely takes more of a centre stage in this book, much to my swearing delight.
Hellion was I think the first antagonist killed in this book, and his scariness was largely already being undermined by the combination of Yultes, Garith and Branwen. It was a satisfying ending we saw here, and a return to reasonable leadership to the Dathirii House was secured back from that point, even if not secured back to Diel's hands.
I did love, however, that Diel and Jaeger's love story really took the front and centre of these books, because it felt like they were apart from each other for a lot longer than they probably actually were. Did I read that right at some point in this book? The events of all four books happen over 10 days only?!
Mia Allastam wins this book's surprising most stand out character for me. She's someone who lives with chronic pain, someone who is pitied and babied by the rest of her family because of it (because who is really surprised that Lord Allastam is a chauvinist on top of his other many crimes?) and seeing her climb the political rungs of her family and Isandor through power of her intellect alone was so rewarding.
And so I guess the only other big things this book desperately needed to wrap up was, on the one hand, a resolution to the fight between Cal and Larryn, and a resolution to Master Avenazar. No one is surprised that such an evil character can no longer live by the end of things, but I swear I sat at 70% of this book for about two weeks because I was scared of what havok he would wreak before the end of things. Kinda love that Jilssan got her own back on him at the same time as not necessarily falling to the side of the Isandorians, so much as being kept in line by her affections for Amake Brasten!
Finishing this story was incredibly bittersweet. I may not have been around when the series started, but this one did get me through the beginnings of covid. I'll always love it for filling my mind with friends and cosy times when the world was going to hell.
I reckon the only thing I would have loved to see might have been an epilogue in the future lives of the Dathirii elves, one where we could have found out the eventual outcome of the investigation against Lord Allastam's crimes. But my head canon is certainly that he got his and Mia ends up in charge of the house up till the end of her own life.