“…I don’t owe you a career you admire or a partner you approve of. I need you to hear me, really hear me, when I say that I’m through having my life measured and weighed against your ambition.”
― Rosie Danan, Do Your Worst
Riley Rhodes is an American occult expert, aka curse breaker, wanting to turn her family’s supernatural gifts into a legitimate business. Her clients in the past have been small, but when she is hired to break the curse on an infamous Scottish castle, Riley can’t help to get her hopes up. She usually works alone, relying on internet research and her grandma’s journals. Her choice of career as a curse breaker has the ability to put people on edge, especially the skeptics who think she exists to swindle people out of their hard-earned money. When Riley arrives in town, she meets a handsome stranger at the local pub, who matches her banter and knows how to kiss. Starting the next day at work sleep-deprived after thinking of the stranger all night, imagine Riley’s surprise when the stranger ends up working at the same site as her.
Clark Edgeware is hoping for professional redemption. His last archaeological project ended in scandal, leading Clark to rely on his father’s good name to land this latest job. He may be disgraced, but when he learns that someone else has been hired, particularly a self-proclaimed ‘curse breaker’, Clark is livid. He cannot have this charlatan ruining his chance to get back in the good graces of the world of archaeology. He tried to get Riley fired, but unfortunately for him, she overhears and decides to get even. All Clark wants to do is avoid her, but that is not to be so.
Riley needs Clark’s help researching the curse, while Clark discovers that Riley has an annoyingly easy ability to find artifacts, despite the fact that he has been searching the castle for way longer than she has. Riley has high hopes that the curse will work its magic and scare Clark away from the castle, and from her, but sadly the two of them keep finding themselves in closer and closer proximity. The two have an undeniable attraction though, one they can’t seem to avoid. Teaming up to break this curse might end up breaking the two of them.
This was a fantastic romance read with some of my favorite tropes: forced proximity, enemies to lovers/enemies with benefits, instant lust, and opposites attract, to name a few. Do Your Worst, while not the spiciest book I have read, does have some spice on the page (this is definitely NOT a closed-door romance). The spice was well-written, but the instant love/attraction did seem a bit too instantaneous to me. All in all, I did enjoy the plot, but would have loved more information about the world of curse breaking as a whole.
“We all hurt the ones we love,” he said, softly, pointedly. “It’s why we must learn to make amends.”
― Rosie Danan, Do Your Worst