Why You'll Love This
A Secret Service agent guarding the president's daughter — and secretly in love with her — is a powder keg of professional duty and personal loyalty just waiting to blow.
- Great if you want: political intrigue wrapped tightly around a slow-burn romance
- The experience: tense and emotionally layered — conspiracy and relationship stakes escalate together
- The writing: Radclyffe balances procedural precision with genuine emotional intimacy
- Skip if: you haven't read the earlier Honor books — context matters here
About This Book
When duty and desire collide at the highest levels of power, the fallout is anything but simple. Secret Service Agent Cameron Roberts has built her career on discipline and discretion — but loving the president's daughter has made both nearly impossible to maintain. In Love & Honor, Cam and Blair Powell face threats on two fronts: a shadowy conspiracy closing in on them from the outside, and the pressures of secrecy, media scrutiny, and unresolved trust eroding them from within. Radclyffe understands that the most dangerous risks aren't always the ones with guns.
What distinguishes this third installment in the Honor series is how Radclyffe sustains tension without sacrificing emotional depth. The pacing moves with the controlled urgency of a thriller, but the real engine is character — the push and pull between two women who want the same future but can't always agree on how to protect it. Radclyffe writes relationships the way good crime writers write interrogation scenes: every exchange carries weight, every silence means something. Readers who've followed Cam and Blair from the beginning will find this chapter of their story both harder and more rewarding than what came before.
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