I don't read Karen Robards for anything deep or even anything particularly believable. Her suspense novels are fast-paced fluff that don't overload my brain too much when it's already full.
Even so, this was AWFUL! (Warning: Rant approaching!)
When Kate was 15, she had a hard life. She had spent half her life in the foster care system and her latest foster mom's boyfriend was looking at her in ways he shouldn't look at a 15-year-old girl. She has some rough friends, and she sneaks out to take a joyride with them late one night, after most of the city is closed. They go to a convenience store where Kate and a friend go around back to use the ladies' room. While inside, they hear gunshots, and when they investigate, they find that one of their friends has shot a cop, and he's bleeding to death. Kate rushes to help, trying in vain to stop the bleeding, while the rest of her friends take off in the car. When she hears sirens approaching, she runs away (from both the incident and her life).
Thirteen years later, she has a LAW degree and is a prosecutor. Here's where the book gets bad, because one of the friends from that car (the one who probably killed the cop), is going to use that incident to blackmail dear Kate.
What crime did she commit, you might ask, for which she could be blackmailed? I'm not entirely sure. It is possible there's something in that story that could have gotten her in trouble at 15, but 13 years later, it seems rather doubtful, between the fact that she was a minor and there is a statute of limitations on many crimes. Not to mention the fact that she wasn't an accessory! She ran away, which she shouldn't have done, but...okay...on to the blackmail.
There's a massacre in a courtroom. The man she's prosecuting gets a gun (somehow) and starts shooting, along with a few other prisoners. The judge dies, deputies die, random people in the crowd die. Kate is used as a hostage by the last man standing, who drags her back into the holding area and says he'll shoot her if he doesn't get a helicopter.
Enter the killer of the original cop...who recognizes the girl he called "Kitty Kat" as a child. He shoots the man holding her hostage and tells her to say she'd shot him, and then he tells her he expects her to help get him out of jail, or he'll tell people about the original incident.
OK, NOW you're an accessory! This guy was part of a massacre, but you pretended he wasn't involved. You lied again and again, OBVIOUS lies that no one in his right mind would accept. Your justification: If you get put in jail for your past sins (still confused why that would be), your 9-year-old son will end up in the foster care system like you were. Oh, honey, I'd really like to buy the whole maternal protective instinct, but I can't, because you have a law degree, so surely you realize you're putting him in MORE danger with these lies.
But let's pretend, for the sake of argument, that you're some kind of idiot who cheated to pass the bar exam. So you succumb to the blackmail at first. And then, over the next few days, gang members begin threatening you, your son, breaking into your house, kidnapping you at gunpoint, and stealing your car.
Hmmmm....so is your son more likely to be in foster care because his mom's in jail or dead? And in the latter case, he might go down with you! Maternal instincts no longer apply.
Meanwhile, our "hero" is falling in love with her despite the fact that he knows she's lying and his own brother was critically hurt in the shooting. "Oh, you sexy little liar, come here so I can give you a steamy, hot kiss!" Um? Only if you get off on power trips and think you can control this woman with sex? She should go to jail. I don't care if she didn't plan the shooting. It's immaterial. She's involved.
I'm not sure what happens after that, but I suspect if I find out, my brain will implode.
In case you can't tell, I don't recommend this one to anyone.