However, without the public spotlight shining brightly on their young relationship, we get to watch them work on it in private, tackle issues as they arise, re-build what they have from the ground up. The world must not see them as a couple in the aftermath of Nathan’s death, they are forced to maintain the appearance of separation, as well as face the demons brought up by those events on their own. Gideon and Eva are officially broken up but, in reality, they are together more than ever. The story resumes immediately after the events in the previous book. “Day One of my life was the day I met you.” In this third book, we get to see them after the single act that changed everything when each other’s devotion is no longer a question and the only challenge they are left with is to build the kind of relationship that would stand the test of time. In Reflected in You, their souls are irreversibly connected but their pasts try to pull them apart. In Bared to You, their words collide and they struggle to reconcile their lives before that with the irresistible attraction they feel towards each other. This book was needed for the natural progression of not only the plot, but it was also essential for the growth of these characters, these damaged, complicated, obsessively in love characters who accumulated more ‘relationship miles’ in the weeks they’ve been together than an ordinary couple does in a lifetime. I will admit that I was scared of reading this book – a third book in a series of five, the ‘middle child’, is often the plot filler and it leaves you even hungrier for answers than you were before reading it, but I was left with none of those feelings at the end of Entwined with You. I truly believe that good things come to those who wait and this is definitely one of those occasions.
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