![]() ![]() Shimaira leads you into a false sense of security repeatedly, and it truly makes you feel what Meya is most likely feeling. This is what had me turning pages most of all. Meya seems to be in danger quite a bit, and although we know the Lord likes her more than the others, we aren’t quite sure that he isn’t above harming her. Granted, I may be biased because this is exactly the kind of plot I crave in darker fiction, but this is genuinely a gripping book. And he truly was a character that made me squirm a bit in all the good ways. It adds to the air of mystery around the sadistic Lord, and it made him that much more enticing to read. It’s definitely something much more than that, although it’s never truly clarified other than stating that Deminas is an immortal. And he drinks blood…Īt first, I suspected this might be a vampire story due to the blood-drinking. ![]() Yet, he treats her differently from the other servants, and he seems to enjoy teasing her more than entertaining the idea of actually harming her. She is sold to Lord Deminas, who is a sadistic and inhuman ruler. ![]() She’s captured and abused by slavers, and after getting sexually assaulted - which Shimaira does not describe but fades to black - Meya realizes her fate is inevitable. ‘My Lord’ begins with Meya, a woman who had lost pretty much everything to war. ![]()
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