I really loved this book as a kick off to a new series.
It's a quicker read at around 120 pages, yet Ms. Stacey was able to not only develop a plot line that starts on page one and doesn't let up until the last page, but she also managed to create four relatable and unique characters.
The story revolves around Alex Rossi owner and operator of The Devlin Group. The group seems to be larger than the four core characters featured in 72 hours, but these four are the backbone of the company.
Named for the pseudonym that his family lived under in Italy when he was a child, Alex is using his resources to not only assist governments and private corporations in protecting assets or cleaning up after potential international collateral damage; he is also using the group to draw his mother's murderer out from hiding.
72 Hours focuses on Alex's back story and his motives, but there are other key players in there as well. Grace is Alex's ex partner who left the Devlin Group after an "incident" in London. She now lives a clam yet boring life as a single mom who does computer security work on the side. It is boring until her son is kidnapped that is.
Grace returns to her old employer group as the kidnappers have demanded Alex in exchange for her son.
There are a lot of secrets hidden in this small group, and crammed into these short pages. I actually would love to see this book drawn out a little more, but that's just because I love military spy thrillers and these characters really engaged my interest.
The other folks we meet are Gallagher, Alex's best friend and right hand man. Gallagher is a tactical genius seeming to come with specs for impossible tasks in a matter of hours and with minimal resources. All the operatives are written as highly intelligent, fast thinking, critical characters.
With Gallagher we also met Carmen, or Carm. Alex's Girl of All Trades who is a whiz at stealth, intel, and poisons. Grace is his cool under pressure, adrenaline junkie who has a killer shot and lethal aim. The four of them together work to figure out who has Grace's son, why he was taken, and who is behind the plot.
Ms. Stacey also does a marvelous job of keeping her story line tight and her bad guys believable. There is a baddie from Alex and Grace's past, but the main target is an unknown to us until the very end. The end twist has a great reveal and solid backstory. While Alex's mother is mentioned throughout the story, his father remains a vague character. We know he was an undercover operative who mentally and emotionally fell apart after his wife's murder, but we don't get a full view as to where he is at the time of this story or whatever happened to the op he was working on that landed the family in Italy.
Carm and Gallagher appear enough in the book to give you a great peek into their personalities and how they work as people. Tantalizing pieces of their own back stories are dropped in here or there as part of the plot rollout. Little quirks and descriptions of work they have done in the past are pulled in to flesh out their roles. It's completed in a seamless and smooth manner. It also helps close what could have been plot holes or gaps.
Overall, I was really pleased with this book. Typically I find that suspense novels that are shorter than 200 pages can move too quickly, gloss over details, or drop plot points. None of those things happened in this novel. In fact, it ends at a place where you really want to dive deeper into the Devlin Group's work.
Which is a great place to leave off as there IS more to the Devlin Group - I can't wait to pick up book two of this series to find what is uncovered next.