3.5 stars
Will is an FBI agent who has been sent to Kentucky on a sort of off-the-books assignment favour for a senator who has lost money at the track and suspects that it is because the races are being fixed. In the initial investigation, Will found out that was probably correct, so he sets up a trap. Unfortunately, the bag with the FBI money meant to catch the perpetrators in the act walks out the door with a woman, and Will has to hunt her down.
Molly is trying to make ends meet looking after her family. She quit her job because she lost her temper when one of the heirs of the racing farm is inappropriate. And while she is proud that she stuck up for herself, and doesn't like the guy, she also needs to look after her brothers and sisters, who are all still in school. When she finds a bag of money in the barn, instead of waiting for the trainer and her last pay cheque, she takes the money. She knows that it is probably dirty money, but Molly is desperate enough that she doesn't care, and figures that she will deal with hitmen or whoever else comes after the money. Instead, the FBI shows up, with proof that she took something that wasn't hers.
After Will gives Molly a choice to either work with the FBI or to go to jail, they start working together. Will has to pretend to be her boyfriend so that no one will suspect that he's trying to stop the race fixing, so he also gets to know her siblings, too. There seems to be a psycho on the loose attacking animals, they can't find the ringer horses, and Will and Molly are starting to have feelings outside of the job for each other.
I first read this a long time ago, and while it isn't my favourite by this author, I enjoyed it at the time. I still enjoyed it, and unlike many other readers, I am not thrown by pay phones or the fact that cell phones are called cellular phones, and that not everyone has them. What did throw me a little bit is the fact that Will essentially blackmailed Molly into working for him as an informant, and then slept with her. And while I believe that isn't strictly verboten, it's still not professional to sleep with an informant on an open case. No one was taking advantage of the other person, but I kind of lost a little bit of respect for Will when that happened.
The relationship developed really fast, and the end to the case that the FBI was actually working was very anticlimactic, and happened mostly off page. I also find it hard to believe that kids who had gone through as much as Molly and her siblings had would be so quick to trust anyone.