2.5 rounded up
I was really looking forward to this one and I *did* enjoy it overall, but as is the case with so many of Rayne's book, this one just went off the rails for me.
I was PRIMED to love this book based on the glimpses we got of Colt and Brax's relationship in the earlier books, but I just don't feel like the author delivered. To start off, the first 1/3 of the book is essentially told in flashbacks starting from when Colt & Brax first meet each other and showing important moments between them up until the present timeline. While I appreciated getting a bit more context for their relationship, this felt super clunky. Starting the first 30% of your book entirely with past memories to catch up your reader just felt like a really inelegant solution and it might have worked okay if this was the first book in the series, but because we already know these characters and have an idea of tensions between them from the previous books, having SO much past memory stuff before we can get to the actual present storyline totally killed the momentum and wasn't the most auspicious of starts.
THEN we finally get to the present timeline, where we know, from the previous book, that Colt and Brax have essentially been on the outs for about a year since shit went down in the original trilogy, and ending in a big blowout between them about 3 months ago that resulted in them basically not speaking at all. And then... none of that is ever satisfyingly addressed. Holt just basically decides to make Brax talk to him again and Brax basically gives in with little resistance and it was the world's most unsatisfying resolution to a year-long strugglefest I've ever read. There was zero tension or really meaningful back and forth and it made the whole thing feel very manufactured.
And THEN we get to what I think is one of Rayne's biggest weaknesses, which is her tendency to go WAY overboard on the plot to the point of nonsense. I'm all for a thriller and plot twists and some actual interesting plot to go with my romance, but this was all over the place. Way too many characters and just a lot of jumbled information that made my eyes totally glaze over in confusion and boredom. I know fans of multi-verses will love the little cameos from her other series, but though I read/enjoyed them, I actually found the fact that basically every character she's ever written shows up in this one to be exhausting and, again, felt very forced.
Which makes it sound like I disliked the book, and I didn't! I really enjoyed Brax and Holt as characters, and their relationship was lovely, but I wanted more of it. I wanted a little less focus on a zany plot and more time and care into developing the move from friends to more. There was SO much that could have been really explored here, and though the author touches on these elements, such the tension between Brax's job as police chief and Holt's role in a crime family, it's all so surface-level that it left me ultimately feeling unsatisfied. The happy ending was great, but I didn't really feel like I got to see them work hard enough at it to feel truly satisfied. Which is maybe why I'm rating it a bit lower than the rest of the books in the series--I think it's probably about on par with them, but this story was so up my alley and had so much potential I felt more let down by it than by the others. I still liked it, and I'd still recommend for fans of the series, but I'm becoming a bit disenchanted with this author.
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ARC copy received from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.