I recieved a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review via NetGalley.
Terri Reed is a known author to me. I have read a few of her books, but not many. Her tendency, for me, is to be a hit or miss author. This one…well it was a bit of a miss for me. I bumped the score to 3 stars because I am sure I am comparing it to other books in my head rather than judging it on content and quality alone. I have read better love inspired romance books lately, so it is being judged against it is peers, including its predecessor in the series. Yes, these are the folks from Buried Mountain Secrets, which I really enjoyed.
So…
Jane Thompson is not actually Jane Thompson. She is actually Ashley Willis, an aspiring actress (but actually a waitress) from LA. Ashley had the misfortune of being at the wrong place at the wrong time. Working at The Matador, one of Ashley’s duties at the end of the night was taking out the trash. But she forgot to wedge the back door so she can get back in and has to go around front. In the side alley she notices two men arguing and hides.
One man, it turns out, is suspected to be an undercover cop everyone just assumed went MIA. The other unknown assailant is the mob boss, Maksin Sokolov. Maksin shots the other man with Ashley as witness and leaves. Ashely hustles back into her place of work and tells her boss what she saw. He tells her the police department is full of men on Sokolov’s payroll and provides her with money and a fake id in order for her to vanish. He even gives her a ride out of town.
Months later, almost out of money Ashley ends up in Bristle Township, Colorado. She rents a room and gets a job serving coffee at the Java Bean to make ends meet. Al seems to be going well, under an apparent detective shows up and starts flashing her old picture around. Deputy Sheriff Chase Fredrick approaches her about this and prevents her from leaving town, asking her to trust him. Problem is, the moment she does, the detective shows up and takes her away…and he’s not a detective.
This book is full of situations designed to create suspense. There are classic near-death experiences with cliffs, bullets, car chases, etc. There was one new thing I can’t say I have read. That’s climbing a tree to escape two gunmen. An inventive way to elude them, curtesy of Chase.
Awhile I can’t complain about the lack of action, I found the series of events quite predictable and had the killer pegged from the moment Ashely told her story to Chase. I do like how the workers of the sheriff’s department worked together as a team and were EXTREMELY understanding of the actions Ashley took, thinking she needed to escape and become a completely different person. But like of characters can’t completely over shadow how predictable the plot was to me.