Audrey Kline is the daughter of a well-known rich lawyer, and she wants to prove her worth as a prosecutor by putting away a notorious gangbanger accused of murder. Alex Taylor is part of a SWAT team called to a bomb threat at the site of a recent murder by the Rich Girl Killer. Audrey arrives at the scene because the victim was her friend. What could these incidents have to do with each other?
Nothing, actually, but I'll get to that later.
Because Audrey's case is high profile, she becomes the target of threats. Alex steps in to officially protect her. Is her stalker related to the case she's prosecuting or the serial killer on the loose?
The book would have been much more interesting if Audrey had been the target of a serial killer, with a final revelation of the killer's identity and a showdown, but this is book 1 in a mini-series, so oh no no no, we can't have that, can we? Jesus Christ, on what planet does this publisher think it is okay to believe that a book can be in any way satisfying if you don't resolve a MAJOR aspect of the plot? Maybe I don't want to read four books to get the answer to what I should have been given in the first! If the serial killer aspect had been in the background and not directly impacting on this story, it would have been fine. But, no, the serial killer actually has their eye on Audrey and has threatened her, and at the end just decides, "Nah, I'll move onto someone else," for that mystery to be solved some other day.
Not believable. Not satisfying in any way.
So, all we're really left with is a half-assed story about gangbangers (yawn) and Audrey's attempts to put the leader in prison. I'm not a fan of stories about gangs. I don't find them scary or interesting. They're just thugs. Here, they're mostly faceless, which also takes me out of the story. There was surprisingly little action or suspense to be found here. There's a bomb explosion that was deliberately designed not to hurt anyone (yawn), plus a couple of gangbanger messages (yawn) before everything hastily wraps up for a shootout that shouldn't have been able to happen in the first place if Alex's house's security system was set up as it was, as described earlier in the book.
Of course, this is a romance, but it utterly fails on that level as well. Audrey and Alex barely interact for the first 80 pages. He makes some condescending remarks to her about how she needs to win the case during a first meet at a pub. Then there's a second meeting during a truly bizarre sequence in which Audrey is having a crying meltdown at the scene of her friend's murder and Alex makes some more smug comments about the case before handing her a handkerchief (or bandanna) for her tears - and their connection is forged! Huh? They don't interact again for a month (!) and then after a day, they're basically in love. There's another utterly bizarre scene in which Audrey has a screaming fit and panic attack when she wakes up and Alex isn't in bed next to her. I couldn't understand what I was reading! Who acts like that?!?
It's not the worst category romance I've read this year - I haven't read many this year because the ones I have been picking have been largely terrible - but that is not enough of an endorsement to rate it anything more than 1 star. The romance failed to convince, the story was a yawn, and the most major element of the plot was left completely unresolved, always a big no-no for me. Use your muscles to chuck this misfire on the...fire.