BOOK REVIEW OF
Ruthless Fae
Zodiac Academy (Book 2)
Caroline Peckham and Susanne Valenti
Reviewed by Ella Law (with Gemini & NotebookLM)
Updated December 28, 2025 | Published October 8, 2025
Table of Contents
Content Rating
🔴 CSR-4: Explicit & Dark Themes – Adult Readers Only
Read more about The Obsidian Library’s Content Rating Scale here.
⚠️ CW: 🩸 Graphic Violence (physical abuse, fighting, torture), 🚨 Sexual Content (explicit descriptions), 🧠 Psychological Trauma/Abuse (parental abuse, childhood abandonment, emotional manipulation)
✔️ This book dives headfirst into the dark themes established in Book 1, including explicit sexual encounters, detailed descriptions of physical violence, and the use of magic for psychological control and manipulation.
📖 Introduction & Why This Book Matters
If the first book of the Zodiac Academy series, The Awakening, was about breaking the protagonists, Tory and Darcy Vega, Ruthless Fae is about forging them anew in fire. The narrative lens shifts dramatically in this second installment, giving voice to the four Heirs—Darius, Caleb, Max, and Seth—alongside the Vega twins. This shift in perspective is a welcome narrative choice, transforming the Heirs from one-dimensional bullies into complex, damaged individuals grappling with immense political pressure, their own dark secrets, and generational trauma.
Following the horrific bullying inflicted by the Heirs—including Tory's near-drowning and Seth's brutal, filmed humiliation of Darcy—the twins enter a crucial phase. Their initial hopelessness gives way to a fierce, strategic desire to fight back and prove their place at Zodiac Academy. This pivot from victimhood to empowerment—epitomized by Tory’s decision to set Darius's room on fire—fuels the entire plot. Ruthless Fae matters because it elevates the stakes from mere academy roguishness to political and magical war, confirming that the twins are not just royal pawns, but active, potent players.
✍️ Plot Summary
If The Awakening was about breaking the Vega twins, Ruthless Fae is about forging them in fire. Tory and Darcy have survived the brutal humiliation inflicted by the Heirs, but rather than fleeing Solaria, they are turning their pain into power. No longer content to be victims, the twins launch a calculated campaign of revenge, determined to prove they are not just royal pawns, but active players in the game for the throne.
But the battlefield is shifting. For the first time, the narrative expands to reveal the perspectives of the Heirs—Darius, Caleb, Seth, and Max—exposing the immense political pressure and dark family secrets that drive their cruelty. As the twins strike back, the line between enemy and lover blurs, igniting forbidden tensions and toxic attractions that complicate their war for survival. With the threat of the Nymphs rising and the Celestial Council watching, the twins must decide how much of their humanity they are willing to sacrifice to become truly ruthless.
💡 Key Takeaways & Insights
Revenge is a Family Affair. The core emotional drive of the novel is the twins' calculated counterattack against the Heirs. Their pranks are often humurous escalations that serve a dual purpose: they reveal the Vega twins as truly Ruthless Fae deserving of their spots at Zodiac Academy, and expose the Heirs' vulnerabilities. Through this relentless campaign, the reader learns critical secrets about each Heir, from Max's fear of illegitimacy to Seth's abandonment trauma, Caleb's perfectionist streak, and the truth about Darius's abusive father.
The Fae Hierarchy is Rotten: The book peels back the opulent facade of Solaria’s elite. We learn that the Heirs are less masters of the kingdom and more victims of the Celestial Council (their parents). The true villainy solidifies around Lionel Acrux, Darius’s father, whose "rages" involve physically beating his son while Orion stands guard, bound by an oath to protect Darius from harm but unable to intervene fully. The revelation of Xavier’s unexpected Pegasus Order further underscores Lionel's cruel fixation on purity and power, cementing his evil not only as political expediency but also as outright familial abuse.
Forbidden Bonds Emerge: As the twins take control of their power and their destinies, the lines between enemies and something deeper blur.
Tory & Darius: Their tension explodes into an intense intimacy during a fire magic lesson. Their connection is volatile and rooted in their shared elemental power, forcing Darius to admit he doesn't find joy in tormenting Tory.
Darcy & Professor Lance Orion: The quiet, forbidden tension with the enigmatic Professor boils over into a stolen kiss in a private bubble at the bottom of the Acrux pool. While Tory and Darius fight their clear connection to one another, Darcy and Lance find more and more ways to spend time together.
The Power of Trauma: The emotional arcs of the Heirs are tied to the twins: Max’s Siren Song backfires, revealing his darkest secret to Tory, and Caleb is the first to feel guilt over his actions toward the twins. Seth, unknowingly, makes Darcy an "Omega" in his werewolf pack, complicating the feelings he wants to feel towards her.
Order Emergence and War Declaration: The book ends with the fateful Pitball game, where the Nymphs, the Fae's ancient adversaries, launch a full-scale attack. In the ensuing chaos, Tory and Darcy unleash a mysterious, combined blue and red fire, successfully devouring the Nymphs and saving the academy. This powerful display confirms the full emergence of their unknown Order, paralleling their power to that of Darius and Orion as the two pairs fight to save each other’s lives. The final chapter ends on a chilling note as the Nymphs formally declare war, transforming the school setting into a battlefield.
🤯 The Most Interesting or Unexpected Part
Beyond the academy walls and celestial politics, Ruthless Fae applies to real life by exploring how cycles of generational trauma manifest and how resilience can be forged in the fire of adversity.
The exposure of the Heirs' perspectives—specifically Darius's physical abuse by his father, Lionel Acrux , and the political pressures placed on Caleb, Max, and Seth —forces a look at how learned cruelty is a survival tactic. The twins' calculated counterattack models how an individual can move from victimhood to agency by reclaiming their narrative and leveraging their strengths in a hostile environment. Finally, the burgeoning, forbidden relationships between Tory & Darius and Darcy & Orion explore the complexity of toxic attraction and intimacy forged in shared danger and moral ambiguity.
🏛️ How This Book Applies to Real Life
You should read this if you enjoy: Dark fantasy romance, the enemies-to-lovers dynamic, and bully romance with high-stakes world-building. Fans of the genre who appreciate the character development and redemption arcs in series like A Court of Thorns and Roses or The Cruel Prince will find the Zodiac Academy series to be an addictive, complex fantasy ride.
You might want to skip this if: You prefer clear-cut heroes, healthy or low-angst relationships, and lighter fantasy. Given the CSR-4 rating and explicit Content Warnings , readers sensitive to graphic violence, parental/psychological abuse, and explicit sexual content as core plot elements should steer clear.
📚 Final Rating: 4.3 / 5
🎯 Should you read it? Absolutely, especially if you enjoy high-stakes academy settings, enemies-to-lovers dynamics, and complex, morally gray characters. This book is a necessary progression in the series, ensuring the payoff of the original premise. It reliably delivers the escape and intense emotional drama the series is known for.
🔥 Final Thought: Ruthless Fae masterfully uses revenge as a catalyst for intimacy and self-discovery. By giving the Heirs their own voices, the authors deepen the moral ambiguity of the conflict, making the burgeoning, forbidden relationships feel earned and intensely electric. It takes the "bully romance" foundation and builds a politically complex, action-packed fantasy structure on top of it, ensuring the Zodiac Academy series remains a wholly captivating, detail-rich experience worth multiple reads.