As a lead lawyer at the Economics Crime Commission, Christopher Paget is handed a challenging case to investigate: one of stock price manipulation by a powerful industrialist with political connections to the White House. The case becomes larger and more mysterious quickly and the story becomes more of a police thriller than a legal/political one. While his relentless following of the “paper trail” is quite believable, Chris Paget’s going beyond his mandate in his quest for getting to the criminal element of the story, which encompasses numerous escapes from hit-men, a car chase where he outlasts (albeit, with some luck) the pursuers and coming out on top of a fistfight with a key villain is a lot tougher to take in. Also, the love connection happens quite quickly and not in the most believable manner.
Still, the book is a decent read in that the two essential questions – what is the bigger mystery behind the financial manipulations of the industrialist, Mr Lasko? and how does Lasko always seem to know what Chris Paget is up to and have his hit men ready to assail him? - run across the entire story and keep you interested. In the end, the answer to the first is plausible but not compelling; the answer to the second is a bit of surprise.
In short, a decent page turner that reads more like a Hollywood action movie than a tightly written suspense thriller.