The last book, #5, was my favorite book in the series so far; but this one, #6, is my least favorite. Another title could be "The Antics of the Rich and Famous". There are lots of California glitz and glamour, and the book oozes money, wealth, and amoral people. The series is still formulaic but unrealistically entertaining - a guilty pleasure so to speak. Stone is still bed hopping and being chased by beautiful unclad women which he readily succumbs to. All this gratuitous sex adds nothing to the story line and cheapens Stone's character. I am beginning to like his former NYPD partner, Dino Bacchetti, better than Stone.
The story begins with Stone Barrington, ex-policeman turned lawyer, marrying Dolce Bianchi in Venice, Italy. This is a rebound wedding as he wanted to marry Arrington Carter, but she married movie star, Vance Calder. Dolce is the daughter of a "retired' Mafia chieftain named Eduardo Bianchi. There are to be two ceremonies, a civil one and a religious one. They make it through the civil; but before the religious one can take place in St. Mark's, Stone learns that Dino has received a phone call from the states that movie star Vance Calder has been shot and killed. His wife, Arrington, Stone's ex-girlfriend, has been taken to a local hospital. Eduardo decides that it would be unwise to go forward with the wedding until the situation back in the states has been resolved. This, of course, doesn't sit well with Dolce.
Stone hops on a plane and high tails it back to Los Angeles. The LAPD have already uncovered several reasons that Arrington might be their prime suspect. When Stone arrives at the Judson Clinic, he discovers that Arrington is undergoing periods of anterograde amnesia brought on by the shock of Vance's murder. She wants him to handle the financial and legal matters and help the police find her innocent. Everyone is convinced that Arrington killed Vance - all except Stone who believes she wouldn't do such a thing. He actually becomes a hindrance to the investigation due to that belief.
In the meantime, Dolce can't take no for an answer when Stone decides he doesn't love her and cancels the wedding. Does he have a new chance for a life with Arrington? Dolce begins stalking him because she considers them married with only the Venetian civil ceremony while Stone was told the marriage isn't official until the religious one takes place. Dino's wife, Mary Ann, is Dolce's sister. Dino has been warning Stone not to get involved with Dolce. She will do anything to get what she wants.
Stone begins investigating on his own and discovers plenty of dirt on people involved including finding out that Vance was a flagrant adulterer. Dolce also begins sabotaging Stone's life. He has to rush back to New York when he learns water is flowing down the stairs in his Turtle Bay home. Guess who's on the plane? A woman named Vanessa Pike that Stone had just met and had dinner with dies in a house fire after he leaves. Could Dolce be involved? The book ends in a court trial. Is Arrington found guilty? The ending was ambiguous and inconclusive. Does Stone really want Arrington back or has he changed his mind? And what about little Peter, Arrington's and Vance's child? Was the blood test tampered with that proved who the father is? I personally can't figure what Stone sees in the new Arrington. She's changed from previous books and not for the better. Maybe he now sees it too? The ending reveals a couple of surprises from Eduardo. I hope the next book has Stone controlling his urges and heading back to New York for more adventures.