![]() Political intrigue further complicates things. Moira is a heroine that holds her own, and her reckless attempts to win her freedom even as she fights her attraction to Addis hence don’t ring dumb-dumb. Fortunately, Moira is intelligent enough to realize that her second-time-around infatuation with Addis is because she prefers the man to the vain, selfish boy she had a crush on years back. ![]() ![]() I’m prepared to thoroughly dislike Moira, who has all the makings of a martyr wimp. Moira has been taking care of Addis’s son all this time while nurturing a secret crush on Addis. His reason is slowly peeled until later in the story he admits to himself, it’s because Moira is the one true thing in his life that makes him feel that he is truly at home. Moira is a serf to Addis – while she is given her freedom by Addis’s father, Addis refuses to acknowledge that and insists that she remains by his side. ![]() After a period of enslavement and spooky sex in the Baltics region (Crusade adventure went haywire), he is now back in England and in Moira Falkner’s life. Unlike By Arrangement which was devoid of humor and has a hero that was almost passionless, By Possession has a genuinely likable hero and a heroine whose affections for him is better fleshed out.Īddis de Valence is the medieval hero in question. ![]()
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