
In addition to Cat and Dean’s story, there is a bit of espionage going on with someone called The Spy who is working with another person at the school to do exactly what I’m not sure. And that’s where it gets interesting as Cat grows a backbone and turns the tables on Dean by making him grovel…the best I’ve seen in a while. But the tables turn as Dean grows a heart and declares his love to Cat only to turn into a raging lunatic and throw it all away by hurting the one person he has left in the world.

Dean gets what’s coming to him.Īs you may guess, they play the BDSM game with Cat being submissive to the point where I want to slap her and Dean being a pig by humiliating her every chance he gets. He’s extremely unlikeable and evil at the beginning as he torments Cat by promising to keep her secret if she submits to what he wants for a whole month. As part of the Heirs division at Kingmakers, Dean Yenin has a lot to prove and he plays The Bully with anger and finesse. Unfortunately, that someone is the biggest bully at the school. After all, it’s a school that churns out various divisions of mafioso.


Cat has a terrible secret and she’s terrified someone at Kingmakers will find out which would lead to death. Watching yet another young girl out of her league trying to navigate a prestigious school and a bullying bad boy, is something that seems to be all the rage. Located on a remote island off the coast of Russia, Kingmakers’ students take courses in combat, torture techniques, interrogation, extortion, and international banking to name a few. Lark provides family trees at the beginning of the book to get some sense of who was related to who. This book reads okay on its own, but I think reading books 1 and 2 beforehand would have cleared my confusion. First of all, I suggest you read the preceding books in the Kingmakers series (which I didn’t) to get a better knowledge of how all the characters connect and how all the Russian mafia stuff works.
