This isn't normally my genre, so my review may be a little bit harsher than it should be. I do enjoy a good crime/thriller that contains an element of romance, but this was a pure romance novel and not a very good one at that.
To prolong the suspense of whether the two main characters will end up together or not, Jaimie wants a serious relationship because Charlie is his best friends baby sister and you don't endanger a friendship over a casual fling. So far so good. Charlie on the other hand doesn't want a relationship, as her father never got over the loss of his beloved wife and she doesn't want to risk this kind of pain by getting too involved. Sounds reasonable. I'm sure battling the depression of loneliness with an endless stream of meaningless sexual encounters is a healthy way to avoid the pain of lost love.
Not only does that make very little sense, but the first approx. 70% of the book consists basically of Jaimie wanting a serious relationship, imagining sexual encounters with Charlie while masturbating and hating on Dean (the suspect) because the sleaze basically does the same thing (the masturbating not the relationship part). Charlie on the other hand is sexually frustrated since Jaimie won't sleep with her without a relationship, fights her growing attachment and worries about the time when she will be alone with Dean in his office to steal data from his computer, because she fears what he will do without Jaimie's protection.
At that moment I realized that Charlie and Dean are actually perfect for each other. Sure, he is bottom-feeding scum that believes any woman on this planet will sleep with him because she hopes for a payout and if they don't he simply drugs and rapes them. But, he really only wants a fling and the danger of forming an emotional attachment is slim to nothing. Should a car hit him, Charlie would probably only be annoyed because she has to spend time looking for the next sex toy.
Up until the last third the book is quite simply incredibly boring, because aside of the worrying and sleazy ogling by Dean during lunches nothing whatsoever happens, aside from the incredibly unbelievable scenario that someone would hire a hacker from the dark-net to help with his computer problems and not becoming suspicious when she solves them in a matter of minutes.
Since this is possible the worst planned mission in the history of fictitious missions everything of course goes wrong. You'd think that this is the part where the story finally picked up and you were basically on the edge of your seat with suspense. Personally, I started skimming. It was quite obvious that the author knows absolutely nothing about computers and even less about tactical missions. The whole last part was basically one Hollywood B-movie cliche chasing another. At one point the villain calls the construction company of his current project to deliver cement or something so that he can pitch our heroes into a pit and lay the foundation of the building on them. What, were they out of sharks with lasers mounted on their heads? The heroes basically get rescued because the construction company calls in the delivery.
In the end Charlie falls in love with Jaimie because he gave her a hand job leaving her wanting more. Classy.
In summary, the love story is horrible, the plot is worse and there is no chance in hell that I will ever read another book by this author.