Find your next great adventure.
In a world with stark lines between heroes and villains, trifling with morals or loyalties could cost your life. So someone really should tell Star that seducing his nemesis Nightingale would not be very heroic and that he should probably stop before they both catch feelings.
Night was supposed to be a hero, just like Star. His chemical makeup should make him the perfect definition of a 'hero,' but his crimes tell a different story. Throughout his career as a public menace, he leaves a trail of clues that point toward a future horrific massacre—one that neither Night nor Star would survive.
As Star pieces together Night’s mysteries and advances on Troy’s headquarters, Star realizes that the only one able to save them might not be willing to.
One by one, the Protectors are disappearing. No one knows where they've gone, and no one knows if they'll be coming back. After Night's experience in prison, he's only trying to move on to a more peaceful future when he seemingly disappears off the face of the earth. Star is left to fend for his newly acquired boyfriend with minimal clues. So far, all Star has to work with are:
- A short note that tells him he has two weeks, or else a rebellion would do something horrible. The terms of the agreement were not listed.
- The newfound knowledge that Night's parents and Troy were a part of the rebellion—but he can't talk to either of them without giving that knowledge away.
- One ominous warning from an intern from the Solar Works research department, who also disappeared entirely after giving that warning.
- A new president who Star really, really hates.
Star has to put together the puzzle without knowing who will be kidnapped next. Odd alliances are formed, new enemies are found, and Star finally puts together the pieces just before a battle of epic proportions. Star and Night may have survived Pluto, but when you're a Protector, catastrophe follows you. All they can hope is to survive to see each other one last time, to create their own family, and possibly to feed the pigeons before the next monumental tragedy hits.