Honor Guards cover

Honor Guards

Honor • Book 4

4.30 Goodreads
(2.0K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

When your bodyguard is also your secret lover, a conspiracy closing in from Paris to Washington stops being just professional — it becomes personal in the worst possible way.

  • Great if you want: romantic suspense where the stakes feel genuinely life-or-death
  • The experience: taut and fast-moving once the conspiracy snaps into focus
  • The writing: Radclyffe balances tactical tension with quiet emotional intimacy between scenes
  • Skip if: you haven't read earlier Honor books — the bond won't land the same

About This Book

When the president's daughter and the Secret Service agent sworn to protect her are also deeply, privately in love, the professional and the personal don't just blur — they collide with dangerous consequence. In Honor Guards, Radclyffe raises the stakes of that impossible tension by pulling Blair Powell and Cameron Roberts into a conspiracy that spans continents and threatens lives far beyond their own. The emotional weight here isn't just about survival; it's about what two people risk when love and duty refuse to stay on opposite sides of a line.

Radclyffe writes action and intimacy with equal assurance, and that balance is what distinguishes this series entry. The pacing moves with the urgency of a thriller while never losing the psychological interiority that makes these characters feel genuinely lived-in. By the fourth book in the Honor series, the relationship between Blair and Cameron carries real history, and Radclyffe uses that accumulated trust — and accumulated vulnerability — to make every threat land harder. Readers already invested in these women will find the bond tested in ways that feel earned rather than manufactured.