In fictional
Shelter Cove, Arkansas, Emily Lockhart has been running the Shelter Café diner.
Her cook, Bella, is probably the closest person to a friend she has in the
small town, though Bobby Wade – who runs the fishing resort – and Sheriff’s
Deputy Warren Killian are good to look out for her. It’s unfortunate that she
can’t share with them her deepest secret. That her name is not Emily Lockhart,
but Kate O’Brien. Her twin sister was brutally murdered six years ago, and she
almost died, too. Kate has felt safe in Shelter Cove until the day Tony DeLuca,
the Deputy U.S. Marshal who protected her in the original trial, arrives in her
small town with the devastating news that the man convicted of murdering her
sister might’ve been wrongly convicted. And because of that doubt, he might go
free, which is why she’s been subpoenaed to testify.
Since Kate thinks she’s put the past
behind her, she doesn’t want to delve into those dark, scary memories. But it
may be that she didn’t really give herself time to process and grieve. Seeing
Tony doesn’t help, either. She loved him all those years ago, but she chalked
it up to her youth and the situation she was in. And with Tony seven years her
senior, he can’t see her as more than a kid, right? But before a relationship
can be pursued, they’ve both got to survive first, because Kate isn’t the only
one threatened.
Sometimes the past comes back to
haunt us and getting through it takes more inner strength and faith than Kate
knew she had. As she struggles with her faith, she realizes that, “No matter
what happened in life, God’s love and grace were constant.” Lines like those –
like little “Aha!” moments – send a message without being preachy. Mehl’s story
takes off running, and while it slows down in spots during the novel, it
generally keeps up the pace. I’m almost always up for a suspense novel, though
it seems to me that considering it romantic
is a bit of a stretch. Budding romance, sure, but nothing beyond that. Love is
always rather tentative in such stories of late, which is fine by me, as I’m
looking toward the suspense of the novel, not the dewy eyes and nervous
butterflies. I thought the main antagonists were strong. However, I feel as
though we could’ve known more about Tony and Kate, but they were still likable
main characters. I didn’t like this story better than the first one in the Defenders of Justice series, but it’s
still one I’m glad to have picked up.
Book One: Fatal Frost
No comments:
Post a Comment
You have a book or post-related comment on your mind? Wonderful! Your comments are welcome, but whether you are a regular or guest Rutabaga, I expect you to keep your comments clean and respectable. :-)