Karen Cleveland writes a twisted and tense espionage thriller through the prism of a family and a marriage, where the life of a CIA counterintelligence analyst, Vivian Miller, begins to unravel after coming up with an algorithm that will allow her to access the computer of a suspected Russian spy and handler of sleeper agents in the US, Yury Yakov. Living in a small home in the suburbs, close to Langley, Vivian has been happily married to her adored husband, Matt, for a decade, and have 4 young children, Luke, Ella, and twins, Chase and Caleb. Caleb has a congenital heart defect, piling on the worry and stress in the everyday family domestic chaos that results with small children. Matt is the backbone of the family, it is he that is responsible for the juggling of the everyday care of boisterous children, with all the consequent issues and the unexpected that arises. It is Vivian's job that provides the health insurance that takes care of Caleb's health bills and her income that provides the mainstay of the family, where managing their finances is a constant struggle.
Despite her inner yearnings to be a stay at home mom for her kids through the years, circumstances have conspired to ensure that Vivian's family is dependent on her job. As she begins to look at the contents of Yury's laptop, she finds pictures of five sleeper agents, and her world falls apart when to her horror, one of them is her beloved Matt. Vivian loves her country, she would never countenance betrayal and treason, but these are not normal times as she finds her life spiraling out of control. She is sucked into a moral quagmire, like most women, her first priority is her family and she will do anything, absolutely anything to protect and ensure the safety of her children. Vivian begins to reflect on the nature of her relationship with Matt and the dynamics of their marriage in a narrative that goes back and forth in time. She mulls over the strange and odd anomalies through the years, balancing that with all the self evident proof of his unquestionable love for her and the children. Has Matt been manipulating her? Her doubts and mistrust are at war with her inherent emotional closeness to Matt as she is torn apart, and as the danger comes to encompass the children, she looks to find a way to save her family and her country when all the odds are stacked against her.
Karen Cleveland writes a intense and twisted domestic drama, a family in danger, in a story of espionage and intrigue. She piles on the suspense and tension in this well plotted spy thriller, and her knowledge of the workings of the CIA is informed by personal knowledge, she herself used to be a CIA analyst. This was an entertaining and compulsive read which will appeal to a wide range of readers interested in domestic drama and espionage thrillers. Many thanks to Random House Transworld for an ARC.