A young boy witnesses a brutal attack on an elderly man. Despite his fears of gang retaliation, he goes to the police and identifies the killers. When they are set free due to a technicality, he and his family are spirited into the witness protection program and moved across the country. Thirty years later, Stan Kobe is a highly respected prosecutor in Phoenix AZ, with a loving wife and two children. When two criminals are arrested for smuggling guns and drugs across the Arizona / Mexico border the obvious choice to lead the prosecution is the county’s most feared and toughest prosecutor – Stan Kobe. His unenthusiastic response surprises everyone, except the gang bangers who recognize the now-grown “little snitch” from their Chicago days.
What I liked best about the book were the scenes with the 12-year-old African American James Overstreet and his 85-year-old white friend Manny Fleischman. Marco crafted a believable, if unusual friendship that joined two baseball fans, and spanned not just a generation gap, but a racial divide in 1975 Chicago. James is cautious but curious, respectful but sassy, frightened yet courageous. Marco paints a picture of a part of Chicago where gangs terrorize residents and recruit ever younger members, and yet where a strong nuclear family could help their children resist the pull of gang membership. It’s a story of personal responsibility, of doing what is right even when it puts you in danger, of telling the truth.
Where Marco stumbled, however, was in writing the adult Stan Kobe’s scenes. He spends far too much time exploring Kobe’s angst over his big dark secret – a secret “so deeply buried,” yet it can be ferreted out by his best friend in an hour or two of research. The plot he hatches to right the wrong is convoluted and sketchy at best; he seems to be operating strictly on adrenaline and a desire for revenge, rather than being the methodical, tough prosecutor we’re told he is. The ending stretches credulity – everyone but the Pope is apparently involved. And I was really disappointed that some of the conspirators will, apparently, survive with little or no repercussions. Still, Marco crafts a pretty good thriller. The action is fast-paced and held my interest throughout.