The second Wings ‘N’ Wands installment takes on the considerably more complex task of a triad romance, with Amaru’s accidental 500-year magical disaster serving as both comic engine and the source of genuine emotional weight: the pre-existing bond between Luka and Vasily gives this book a more layered romantic architecture than its predecessor. The Sousa clan’s awakening provides rich worldbuilding texture, and the authors show admirable restraint in letting the clan’s reintegration into the present era carry thematic resonance rather than just plot function. The communication failures between the three leads can test patience, though they are ultimately in service of a resolution that lands with real warmth. It’s a denser, more ambitious installment that mostly justifies the complexity it takes on.