Description
Let me forget you ever lived . . .
When it comes to the woman he loved, handsome, hunted, “rogue”, Gil Wryson has done just that, even forgetting his own name, until he crosses swords with a mysteriously brash woman who appears to have stolen his house—at least he thinks it’s his house. But so long as she doesn’t steal his heart, surely he can deal with the fact that the only one who stirs his memory, is not only unlike any woman he’s ever known, she’s hell-bent on betraying him to the people who are hunting him?
Let me die if I cease to remember you . . .
Despite stealing other people’s houses, clothes, food, money, identities and children, Lady Eternity Jones draws the line at hearts. Once she swore never to forget her first love. Now she has, her memories are of one thing only. Her abusive, murderous husband. So if survival means suffering a cocky, mess of a man in “her” home, in order to get her hands on his secrets, she’ll do it, provided she can get her hands on other things as well.
It’s a lot more than maybe. There’s no maybe with a corpse.
But Gil Wryson isn’t the only one being hunted. When the race is against time and time is swiftly running out, can the man with no past, have a future? He may need her to help him remember. But does she need him to help her forget?



Moore’s latest romance with a twist, tells the tale of the feisty Eternity Jones and the haunted Gil Wryson. You don’t need to have read ‘O’Roarkes Destiny’ before reading this book, (but I recommend you do!) because pertinent points from the previous book are explained in this one.
Wryson’s Eternity explores themes of identity, how trauma can wipe one man’s mind clean of his history, and how keeping her real identity a secret is so important to Eternity.
This is a no spoiler review, so I’m not going to tell you what happens. What I do want to tell you about are the incredible images left lingering in my mind. Moore’s writing is dynamic and immediate. She gets right inside her protagonists’ heads so that the reader is party to their secret thoughts, inner turmoils and genuine reactions to what’s going on around them.
I will never forget the image of Wryson stealing a piglet and being chased by the farmer with a pitchfork! I won’t forget the tangled cottage garden or the dusty house at Dark Falls with its candlelit ballroom. And I certainly won’t forget the fractured, tumbling thoughts of Eternity as she fights for her life in the carriage. I felt as though I was her, fighting off her husband and falling, falling as the carriage crashed.
If you enjoy witty, realistic conversation driven gothic romances where the characters speak just like real people do, then you HAVE to read this book!