Romantic suspense is a rare breed of book these days, so I was excited to try this novel by an author who had written another book I enjoyed (Frozen). However, clunky writing, poor editing and two-dimensional, unrealistic characters made this a slog to get through.
Cadence Lawrence had never expected to see Dirk Lyons again so when she spots him in an OB/BYN office she is stunned. Back in high school, she had accused Dirk of killing his girlfriend. No one would believe her and instead agreed that Dirk's account of witnessing the young lady's abduction was true. When he left town Cadence thought good riddance and hoped he'd taken his troubles with him.
When her cat goes missing, when her home is broken into and when she feels herself being followed Cadence decides to take an impromptu vacation (even though she's a surgeon) to hopefully rid herself of Dirk, whom she is convinced is responsible. She heads to northern Wisconsin, ignoring the storm warnings on the radio and in the news.
Mick McCutcheon was determined to spend a few days at his cabin in Northern Wisconsin and ignored the storm warnings from the weather service, which is how he finds himself rescuing a pretty, blue-eyed blonde from her stalled vehicle. The two make a white knuckled drive to his cabin, barely making it before the roads become completely impassable. Once there, they start to fall in love.
There are a lot of laws regulating surgeons in most states including age restrictions, how many hours they can spend in surgery and how many procedures they can do in a day. Cadence taking an impromptu trip away from home would have been harder than it is made out to be. Mick is a Wisconsin regular and grew up in Minnesota and while we can be caught unprepared for storms, most of us wouldn't have been as unprepared as he was. Also, he would have had a) a gas powered snow blower b)a plow for the front of his truck or c) a riding mower with small snowplow attachment for that cabin. You don't plow out by hand unless you have a standard urban/suburban driveway or at least two or three other shovelers.
What bothered me most was the rogue FBI agent and the fact that the resolution of the crime involved at least three conversations where Cadence said the same thing over and over - she'd never liked Dirk and that's what made her think he killed her best friend. She does come up with a couple of excuses as time goes on but by then the damage was done. All the conversations were stilted and the mystery wasn't very good.
I'm glad people are still writing in this genre but readers deserve better.