Seek the Traitor's Son
Veronica Roth opens a dystopian romantasy series with a prophecy that names two enemy soldiers, both women: one is promised victory, one a love story. It never says which fate belongs to whom, or which belongs to the man standing at the center of both. The uncertainty is the engine.
From the review
The setup is elegant in its cruelty. Two soldiers are summoned together to hear a prophecy that names them both. One defends a small nation. One is a general from the empire bearing down on it. Someone will win. Someone will lose. And somewhere in the gap between those outcomes, love will happen. The prophecy won't say who falls for whom or who walks away the victor. It just drops those two facts in the room and leaves both women to live inside the not-knowing. Roth doesn't treat that as a clever gimmick. She treats it as the emotional weather of the whole book, and it colors everything after.
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