This white-knuckled conclusion to The Brilliance of Stars takes readers on a breathless adventure from the speakeasies of America to the Horse Guards Parade in London, an ancient cemetery outside Paris, and back to the Eastern European strongholds where the Vales\' tragedy first began.
A fast-paced historical adventure novel set during the roaring \'20s The second book in the Jack and Ivy duology Includes discussion questions for book clubs.
Bestselling author J\'nell Ciesielski wraps up the Jack and Ivy novels with yet another thrilling adventure filled with glamorous espionage and a boundless romance.
No matter the cost.
Is it? Ivy will have to rely on every skill she\'s learned if she hopes to survive--and save those she loves.
But that\'s not possible.
It\'s as if he knows her.
Except, there\'s something oddly familiar about the way he moves, the way he anticipates each of her moves.
Her.
Ivy holds them responsible for the tragedy that changed her life, and she is determined to find and destroy the villains once and for all--but she must do so before their relentless assassin eliminates his next target.
When a wave of assassinations strikes world leaders, intel confirms the Order\'s involvement.
Which is no surprise to Ivy; nothing has gone as she expected since that day after Poenari Castle.
The 1920s are in full swing as American speakeasies thrive amid Prohibition, and despite the team\'s best efforts, the deadly cult, the Order of the Rising Moon, lives on in the shadows.
Ten years have passed since Jack and Ivy, elite operatives for the secret agency Talon, rescued their friend Philip and completed their fateful mission.
Fate is fickle and the Stars are silent, but I do know this: No matter how difficult the circumstances or how savagely the world tries to tear us apart, I am here with you.
This white-knuckled conclusion to The Brilliance of Stars takes readers on a breathless adventure from the speakeasies of America to the Horse Guards Parade in London, an ancient cemetery outside Paris, and back to the Eastern European strongholds where the Vales\' tragedy first began