This third Charlie Fox tale was a much better read than books 1 and 2, in my opinion. Charlie's back story has been established, and her character is now free to be dumped into dangerous situations willy-nilly.
Charlie's one-time Special Forces trainer and ex-lover, Sean Meyer, asks Charlie to go undercover at a bodyguard training operation in Germany, where a former SF team member has died under mysterious circumstances. Kirk Salter was the man who stopped Charlie's rapists from killing her, but who was persuaded to testify against her in court. He, like Charlie, apparently had been unable to move forward from that betrayal. But Charlie chooses to help Sean not for Kirk, but because she is still sorting her feelings about Sean, who has yet to learn about Charlie's rape... and to escape a dull Christmas at her semi-estranged parents' home in Cheshire.
Charlie enters Major Gilby's training program as a civilian looking for professional bodyguard employment. Immediately, the various trainers begin to play mind games with the trainees, as well as putting them through brutal physical trials. It takes several chapters to sort out the various trainees and instructors, as some emerge as potential allies, others as suspects. Meanwhile, Charlie has to conceal her own Special Forces expertise, but some of the instructors recognize she is more than she appears, and begin keeping a closer eye on her.
A picture of a below-the-surface threat begins to form when Elsa, a German ex-policewoman, presents a story about a bodyguard assignment that went horribly wrong. Sean's computer pro Madeleine does some digging and uncovers the kidnapping of a girl who turns out to be the daughter of Major Gilby's business investor. Do the repeated attacks by four guys in a Peugeot have something to do with that kidnapping? Another death that preceded Salter's is revealed when one of the trainees turns out to be a brother of the deceased. Then one of the trainers is run off a narrow mountain road on his cycle and killed. Charlie is no longer sure if the threat is from outside or inside the training facility. Soon, the darker threat surfaces--and Charlie will have to choose whom to trust and on which side she'll make a stand.
My biggest complaint about this series is Charlie's continued battle over her emotions around Sean. In this book, he pretty much blots his copybook for me, by using physical violence and public humiliation on Charlie after he learns she did not tell him about her rape. Seriously, why would she even want anything further to do with someone who thinks further trauma and abuse is a great way to express your concern about a woman you supposedly care about?
That we end with the promise of more of this masochistic relationship stuff in the offing just makes me want to donate the next four books sitting on my shelf, unread. Still deciding. I liked the plot and tangled suspense of this book, and the characters were well-drawn. I kind of like Charlie at this point, although she is a psychological mess in need of heavy therapy. I'm just fed up with the Charlie/Sean mess.
Lots of violence of varying degrees, and a ton of gun talk for people who are into that.