Caitin Dare is an FBI agent in Atlanta which I know is in Georgia because I had a penfriend from there when I was at school, had a pencil and postcards too. Now I've got that out of the way, I'll carry on. Caitlin is someone who follows her own line rather than her leader's. She took a unilateral decision to sneak in through the back door of a building and come up behind a man who was about to kill a young mother. She got him but her boss wasn't impressed because she didn't follow orders, I can't say that I am impressed by the FBI. This resulted in Caitlin being thrown out of the Atlanta branch of the FBI. Do they have branches of the FBI all over america in towns where they already have a police force? Bit odd if they did, more cost effective to have the FBI or the state police department, would save on costs. Just saying.
Anyway Caitlin is relegated to work in a specially set up FBI branch called the Railway Branch, imaginative, along with another guy who also doesn't want to be there named Nathan Bridges. They are tasked with finding out the murderer of two nearly identical looking young girls who have been strangled and have a brooch of a ladybird on their persons. Just two agents to work across all america, not even helicopters would be able to do that, they would need time travel to cover the distances, plus don't they have a railway police force already? We've had one in this country for decades and decades, and very good they are too. Caitlin and Nathan hit the ground running and seem to spend most of their time driving to intercept trains from all over the place and then driving to other places which are all over the place. I note from previous reviewers that these places are impossible to reach quickly from each other being hundreds and hundreds of miles apart and in different directions. Well it is fiction.
I wasn't so keen on Caitlin but did like Nathan, although I suppose they balanced each other out. At the end of the book we discover that the railway branch of the FBI is to become a permanent feature as their last case involved stopping the murder of the daughter of a senator (I always think of ancient romans here), was successful and the right guy nabbed for all the murders of the lookalike young girls on trains wearing ladybird brooches. It was okay, but don't feel the need to read any more in this series.
It has left me wondering about the FBI though. I mean seriously, 2 agents to solve all crimes on every train running across America? They definitely would need time travel. Or a Tardis like Dr Who. Now he was someone who knew about getting across universes in seconds so american trains would pose no probem. Am just being whimsical, because I'm fed up of reading too many so so books lately.