BOOK REVIEW
A crime-fighting couple’s consuming love for each other is put to the test when they’re recruited to identify a global counterfeiter in Haddon’s sequel.
After husband-and-wife team Tommy and Hannah Sinclair break up a human trafficking ring and a drug-dealing operation, the FBI asks them to use their skills and talents for a new mission. An international counterfeiting organization of unknown origin has emerged in the United States, France, and Italy, and the pair must determine who’s behind it. Tommy has an eidetic memory, which will be useful when it comes to dealing with bank-note serial numbers, as well as a handy background as a gambler and Mafia associate. Hannah, 14 years his junior, is his able partner, but she’s not pleased that this new assignment may require him to seduce the counterfeiter’s vulnerable wife. “She’ll fall in love with you,” Hannah cries. “I won’t let that happen,” he responds. Hannah has a dangerous role to play in the undercover operation, as well, although she’s only recently recovered from injuries from the previous mission; she’s also wrestling with the psychological trauma of a miscarriage. Nonetheless, like Tommy, she’s ready to get back to work. Haddon dutifully fills in backstory for readers who may be unfamiliar with the first volume in this series, and the beginning passages will quickly hook them: “We haven’t heard from [the FBI] for over a year. The last time was when I shot Lord George Gillingham.” Tommy and Hannah are a disarmingly charming couple to find at the center of a tale of global intrigue. However, Haddon’s scene-setting is less skillful, as one never gets a sense of the era in which the story takes pace; indeed, it’s only in the author’s “Final Thoughts” that readers learn that the tale is set in the ’50s. Romance fans, however, will warm to Hannah’s intense devotion to Tommy and the couple’s passionate (and graphic) bouts of lovemaking; readers’ mileage may vary, though, when Tommy tells a willing Hannah, “I want to leave my mark on you so you won’t forget me while I am away.”
An uneven historical thriller that features a compelling central relationship.