A dual POV mystery/romance set in the Fort Myers, Florida area just after a hurricane. Erin, a detective and her search and rescue dog, Alcee, are volunteering to look for missing people after the storm, and they are sent to a collapsed house to look for survivors. She finds two. One of them happens to be a long lost love interest, Cody. It's quickly determined that the collapsed home was not damaged in the storm, but by explosives.
Side note here, I've read a few of Carol Post's romances, and I'm starting to notice a trend where the female main character is recovering from an abusive past relationship and doesn't want to be featured in interviews. In this book, other than giving Erin a reason to be frosty towards Cody, the abusive relationship doesn't wind up being relevant. Her backstory is interesting enough that it feels like it ought to be its own book. I'm glad it didn't play a major part in the book because there's more than enough going on, but I didn't need a story about how her ex- hurt her so bad, he's now serving time in prison. That distracted from the actual plot.
I enjoyed the book because Carol Post writes engaging stories that keep me turning pages. The story was sweet and wholesome despite the backdrop of a crazy psycho running around trying to murder Cody as the only witness to his crime. The romance elements were solid, and if the book didn't have any mystery elements, I would've rated it a lot higher.
Which leads me to what I didn't like. The antagonist repeatedly tries to snuff Cody like he's the only witness who can lead to the antagonist's arrest. Each time the antagonist makes an attempt, he exposes himself to potentially more witnesses, and just because the author doesn't take advantage of this doesn't mean the murderer shouldn't worry about it. Erin sees the antagonist in the hospital, yet she's never targeted. Another character winds up spending a few hours with him against her will, but the antagonist ignores her from thereon out in his single-minded dedication to take out Cody. At the end of the story, the investigating detectives discover the antagonist has means and motive through independent background checks they've run on all potential suspects, and it's more than enough to arrest him. The antagonist would've been better served running to Mexico rather than trying to repeatedly murder Cody.
I would've liked the story better had the antagonist showed an irrational need to kill anyone and everyone he thought could link him to his initial crime, an expanding pool of victims. Then I'd see him as a crazy guy. His single-minded determination to take Cody out turns him into a plot device, where he serves the story to create external conflict for our romantic interests.