CBR14 Bingo: Scandal (the book features corruption, blackmail, kidnapping, and murder – not to mention gay people in the 1920s. Gasp!)
Spoiler warning! This is the third book in a trilogy. While you can absolutely read this book without the others, you will not get all the beautiful payoff from various earlier storylines that way. Also, this review will contain mild spoilers for earlier in the series. Start with Slippery Creatures.
For the last few months, Lord Arthur “Kim” Secretan and Will Darling have actually been a couple, and nothing bad or dangerous has threatened them in any way. Kim has been helping Will get his bookshop in order, and seems to enjoy finding book treasures at estate sales, but it’s clear that a part of him misses his cloak-and-dagger duties for the special service, and he still feels very guilty about how his engagement to Lady Phoebe dissolved. Obviously not because of anything romantic, but because revealing her father’s crimes to the world and his subsequent death threw Phoebe’s life into chaos. Off in Paris, launching Will’s best friend Maisie’s fashion line seems to be keeping her both happy and busy, though.
The peace was unlikely to last long, and when there’s a brutal murder at Kim’s former gentleman’s club and it seems like Kim’s older brother is the murderer, Kim feels obligated to try to clear his name. Kim would happily see his odious brute of an older brother hang, but if he dies, Kim would become his father’s heir, and that’s a fate so loathsome that he’d rather try to investigate and hopefully get his brother exonerated, even if it means having to spend time with his estranged brother and father. Obviously, the more time they spend among Kim’s upper-class peers, the more out of place Will feels. Already insecure about their class differences, the murder investigation and its potential outcomes place a lot of strain on Kim and Will’s relationship. Can they actually have a future together, when they come from such different worlds?
Obviously, in romances, there’s supposed to be a HEA (happily ever after), yet because this is a trilogy, the previous two books in the series were more of a HFN (happy for now) conclusion. In this book, however, despite their increasingly challenging odds, Kim and Will actually get their happy ending. There’s a lot of drama, intrigue, danger, and near-death experiences before they get there though.
Full review here.