Hotshot criminal lawyer, now college professor, Mackensie Smith is unwittingly pulled out of his relaxed academic lifestyle and drawn into the murky politics behind the scene, in Washington. Mac’s longtime friend Ken Ewald is close to winning the democratic party’s candidature for the Presidential seat, when trouble crops up. Mac, walking his Great Dane Rufus near the Kennedy Centre discovers the body of a young woman working in Ewald’s campaign team. When Ewald’s son Paul is arrested for the crime, Mac cannot refuse to take up his defense. One thing leads to another, and soon Mac is caught up in a mesh of political maneuvers, blackmail, shady lawyers, veiled threats and even violence. Calling in his elegant girlfriend, art gallery owner and ex-divorce lawyer Annabel, an old client, the unsavory ex-policemen Tony Buffolino, and sharp young journalist Rhonda Harrison, Mac has his investigating team in place and things begin to move. The action moves from Washington to New York and San Francisco, and back, from politics to opera to undercover operations in Panama. The happy family man image that Ewald presents to the world becomes shaky as the drama unfolds revealing an unhappy wife, a traumatised daughter-in-law, disloyal employees, and backstabbing party members. The lust for power, and of course, money, soon emerges as the prime mover in this tortuous case.
A good read, but not an outstanding mystery. What stays with the reader is more the excellent character delineation, and the precisely sketched images of life in Washington. This is the second time, I’ve read this book. I did not remember the plot at all, but could immediately recognize Mac Smith, Annabel, Buffolino and of course, the big slobbery Rufus. A book to enjoy on a rainy afternoon.