There is a growing trend in series fiction for authors at some point to write an "after-the-fact prequel," a book that is written after one or more of the others in the series but comes first chronologically. Diane Capri's Fatal Enemy is a longish short story (or short novelette) that introduces her series character Jess Kimball. Although newcomers to the series like me may be a bit flustered at times trying to figure out some of the details about Kimball that I would assume are made clearer in later books, Fatal Enemy is still a solid, albeit quite short thriller about an unconventional heroine.
According to the blurb, Jess Kimball is an investigative reporter who helps the cause of victims’ rights in difficult situations. However, in Fatal Enemy, she functions more as an unlicensed private investigator. In this story, the man she’s investigating is Richard Martin, an ex-boyfriend who raped here years earlier and left her pregnant. Martin moved on and settled in on another target, whom he married. However, when Martin’s wife finally kicks him out, he tries to retaliate by kidnapping his daughter. Jess foils his scheme but decides to let him go, since she has photographic evidence of his crime if he ever comes near his daughter again. That decision proves spectacular wrongheaded, and Jess soon has to rescue the child from an even more dangerous situation.
There’s not a lot of investigation or journalism in Fatal Enemy. just a fairly straightforward thriller in which the only question is how Jess is going to get the child out of her father’s clutches. The solution that Capri comes up with is rather elegant, especially considering that the entire scheme unfolds in a matter of only a few pages. Capri is quite a skilled writer and her word usage is very economical yet effective here. She also manages to give enough background on Jess’s character to explain how she became the highly motivated character described in the Amazon blurbs.
Obviously, a book like Fatal Enemy could easily have been expanded to novel length, as this story completely glosses over details such as how Jess managed to get close to Martin’s wife before the first attempted abduction, while Martin’s flight and disappearance aren’t the least bit mysterious. And, it’s quite possible that much of this story was originally part of an earlier book that the author decided to edit out. But, for what it is, Fatal Enemy is an effective shorter story.
Having said that, the fact remains that Capri charges $2.99 for the Kindle edition of this story as a standalone volume, and, many people may not feel it’s worth that much money for a story that most will finish in under an hour. However, Capri does make this story available for free or at a substantially reduced price in other volumes that are easily available online Readers who are interested in Capri or Kimball might be advised to do a bit of searching to find it in another collection. My own rating for the book is 3.5 stars, rounded up to 4, on the merits of the story alone, without regard to price. However, if I had paid $2.99, I would not have been as favorably inclined. Still, Fatal Enemy introduces a character who could easily become the reader’s literary friend.