3.5 stars rounded up because the ending is so strong. For me personally, this book didn’t hit its stride until the second half. Something wasn’t working right for me in the introduction of the new world to the h, the reservedness of the H, and the unbalance that existed between them. But the h persevered, the H does open up, and it all comes together eventually in a way that resonated well with me. Trigger warnings for mention of parental loss, recollections of losing someone to a terminal illness, and some deaths.
Written in first person, dual POV. No om drama, not really ow drama but h does feel threatened at first by a woman in the H’s band of dragon riders who he was previously romantic with. The H is quick to be offended since his people do not stray or break marriage vows, but h comes from a situation where those vows were broken so her fears are understandable. H is experienced and there are tiny mentions here and there of how he was with past lovers that didn’t really bother me. The h is inexperienced by choice.
Some tropes/themes:
☆ Royalty
☆ Sci-fi that feels more fantasy
☆ FMC has visions and is marked
☆ MMC doesn’t like to talk about the important stuff
☆ Coerced marriage
☆ Dragons and dragon riders
☆ World building that includes a glossary
☆ Having to prove yourself
☆ Lots and lots of heights/falling and facing fear of these
☆ A sense of destiny and fate
Klara (h) is royalty, but as a child of infidelity, has never found the proper place in her father’s palace. She does have a place with her older brother at least. She works in the archive, has visions that have physically marked her, and tries to stay out of the way of a group of priestesses for reasons that we don’t fully understand until later in the book. Klara is more resilient and stronger than she first appears though and she’s about to get a unique way to learn and show that. Klara’s people are a mix of natives to the planet, humans, and mixed genetics. They thought they were alone for some reason, until they start seeing dragons and dragon riders sporadically. When the time comes that they typically show up, it goes a little differently. The dragon riders have demands, one specifically demands that Klara marry him…or else.
Sarkin (H) is a conflicted dude. He carries the weight of responsibility, alongside a mysterious weight of past wounds, that we get hints of but not the complete depths until later. His people have known of Klara’s for a long time, have been studying them, and they need something. Something that Sarkin is planning on using Klara for. How Sarkin is set up initially is not my favorite kind of mix of themes for a H. He’s often described as intense, angry, and he comes off feeling unsupportive despite him forcing Klara’s hand and her trying to do her best. In his POV, we know that he has self-loathing for some of the scenes where she’s obviously lost because he just won’t take the time to explain, but Klara doesn’t get to know this. Once he warms up, I enjoyed his character immensely, but early Sarkin made me want to throat punch him.
The world-building frustrated me initially because of details like words not being in the glossary or details mentioned but not explained until the next time they’re brought up. I’ve only read one of this author’s prior Horde King books from the series that takes place significantly before this one on the timeline. This book does stand alone, however it references aspects of the culture and the history that took place in that prior series and I wonder if I had read more of them, if I would have felt more of a connection to the layering of this new people and culture on top of the previous.
I am a sucker for character growth and Klara GROWS. It takes time, but she kicks ass and even when she ends up mired in self-doubt or fears, she does rise. Because Sarkin is the leader of his people, his wife must bond with a dragon, so Klara ends up on a fast track of training to prepare for a sometimes deadly possible dragon claiming. She’s also fully aware that Sarkin’s hoping that her visions lead his people to a magic source as the whole planet is in danger of losing said sources. That plot-line felt like it wasn’t as developed initially but, like other things, worked better as the story went.
To address the large being that I haven’t talked about enough yet - yes the dragons play a crucial role throughout the story. They were so cool and the world-building surrounding them was done very well. It was fascinating. Sarkin’s dragon is awesome. The hints at another dragon who’s important are beyond obvious, but I still liked how everything unspooled on page.
Romance-wise, this is slow build to them becoming a unit and a genuine relationship forming. Spicy times do start before the 50% mark if I recall correctly and they’re helped along for their first time. Then, despite some awkwardness and feelings because of those events, they continue to get steamy a plentiful amount. I normally prefer my relationships in books to be more secure before the steam gains a full head, however I did actually like that Klara and Sarkin found that aspect of their marriage grounding at times when other parts felt out of control. The emotional intimacy takes longer and Klara is able to be vulnerable way before Sarkin. When Sarkin is vulnerable though, man it felt special. Then when Klara becomes his vulnerability, whew.
The ending of the book, as I said at the start, just blew me away. The way pieces clicked together and plot lines tied up, with some dangling a bit since this is the first in the series. Then the epilogue that shows them in their HEA and deeply in love. I’m glad that I picked this up. I’ll definitely be reading reviews for subsequent books first though given how my feelings at the start weren’t as strong.