SPOILER ALERT
Overdone, overworked and over-long. This needed an aggressive editor, to shorten it mainly by getting rid of so much unnecessary drivel. CIA agent Elisa Flynn goes rogue when her agency refuses to rescue a group of young girls who have been kidnapped by Jorge Masenak, a monster who with his lover Leo Baldwin and his army proceed to rape, torture and kill these girls as young as ten, daughters of wealthy businessmen and influential diplomats. It is a thoroughly disgusting and horrifying storyline. Johansen does not spare the visuals. One of the girls is Sasha who Elisa had found in a circus taking care of and riding the horses. She is now a smart and capable fifteen.
Elisa buys the horses and sponsors Sasha Nalano Lawrence at the St. Eldon Academy in Morocco, Africa.
Elisa hacks into the system at Gabe Korgan palace in Morocco, to get information on Masenak. He catches her and a peculiar relationship evolves between them as they agree to go after the girls and Masenak. What follows is a long drawn out tale, with ridiculous dialogue between Elisa and Gabe, and between Sasha and the Nisean horse Chaos. Sasha is a horse whisperer. Nisean horses are extinct. The dialogue between Sasha and Chaos is like that of educated humans, though immature.
Completely unbelievable. Masenak is crazy about horses, had heard about Chaos and wants him to run in the annual race he runs against rival Marcus Reardon another reprehensible man who also tortures and rapes young people. The group that Korgan assembles includes a former Special Services operative who Gabe worked with, John Gilroy. Both Elisa and John had been trained by the same groups, Native American trackers and Philippinos, famous for their abilities of fading into the jungle. Also assisting is Margaret Douglas and her dog Juno, (Margaret can talk to animals.) from other series by Johansen.
They rescue the girls who have been severely traumatized, shared nightly among the men, and were chained to posts in a tent. Sasha who had free rein because Masenak threatened to torture or kill the girls and or the horses, if she failed to obey, manages to coat the chain with a compound that makes the metal brittle and will break easily when they are ready, smuggled in by Gilroy. But Masenak manages to get away with Sasha, and flies to his castle Julbadar in the Atlas Mountains. So another rescue is planned, Korgan having fallen in love with Elisa, and being willing to do anything to make her happy. One of the most overdone elements of the story is the contentious and sexually tense dialogue between the two. Elisa is petulant, argumentative and childish in her wanting to rescue Sasha and the girls, and her attraction to Korgan. He, as a recognized genius who invents new gadgets and concepts nearly daily, doesn't like to be shown up, as in her ability to hack into his computer. They dick about through nearly the entire story, finally having sex near the end, and with his declaring his love and intent to stick with her to the end. Drivel. There is a fairy-tale ending. Completely predictable, no surprises and nothing creative. It is so frustrating when I look forward to a book and it turns out to be dreadful. I think I have finished with Johansen.