Already invisible, fifty-ish Elinor Gilbert blends into her surroundings, never easily recognized anymore, surviving day-to-day in New York City. But twenty years ago she was an FBI special agent with a pension, health insurance, decent pay, and a job she loved. That is, until her misogynistic FBI boss threw her under the bus while she was covering for him. That was a life changing mistake.
Elinor is surprised when that same idiot supervisor contacts her out of the blue, tempting her with back pay, reinstatement, a fresh start at the FBI, and an immediate undercover job as a nanny at a Westchester County art gallery owner’s home with his far younger trophy wife, her adorable five month old baby and a surly teenager. Plus, two dogs named Jane and Austen.
Amber is the overwhelmed twenty-something status symbol wife and Ben, the target, is the hot-headed, verbally abusive jerk of a husband who might be using his gallery to moneylaunder for the mob. Metcalf is the creepy ex-boss, who might be dangling a carrot over her, but he’s a less than supportive handler for Elinor.
What goes wrong for Elinor who has absolutely no baby handling experience? She falls in love with little Lily and she just can’t find any incriminating evidence.
Elinor reminded me of James Patterson’s long-running Michael Bennett series, the NYC widower cop with ten adopted children. Bennett is always chasing something serious police-wise, but his friendly, befuddled dad humor makes him so likable. Elinor is definitely the female counterpart. She’s funny and clever and we are immediately rooting for her to keep in contact with Lily, no matter how this sting ends. Elinor is a terrific character who definitely needs her own series to teach the FBI how valuable invisible women are. 5 stars!
Literary Pet Peeve Checklist:
Green Eyes (only 2% of the real world, yet it seems like 90% of all fictional females): YES Amber and Lily have green eyes.
Horticultural Faux Pas (plants out of season or growing zones, like daffodils in autumn or bougainvillea in Alaska): NO Aside from the gigantic apology bouquet that Amber brings Elinor, no flowers are out of season.
Thank you to Little, Brown and Company and NetGalley for an advanced reader copy!