I don't think this is a book that held up well over the last twenty-eight years. For starters, the heroine is seventeen. The hero is twenty-eight. At one point, even the heroine brings up statutory rape. The heroine, Dee, runs away from her guardians and Mike, the hero, is the private investigator sent to bring her back. I kept thinking, Amber Alert, why aren't the cops involved, etc, but things were probably different in the eighties. Dee was also raised by 'private tutors,' which I guess was the early eighties version of home-schooling. During the end, Mike hands Dee a glass of wine. 1984 was the year the drinking age was raised to 21. As I was reading, I was basically translating old into new. It was distracting.
On whole, dated-ness aside, I think if you could forget the fact that there is an eleven year difference between Mike & Dee, this is a tight story. Dee is the precursor to Pia and all the other Elder Race heroines that the author, as Thea Harrison, is currently writing. She's extraordinarily intelligent and her plans are clever & well thought out. Mike isn't as fleshed out and is more of a caricature. I'd recommend this to a category reader who is okay with the age thing.