GRADE: B+
BEST QUOTES:
“This was a
girl who could carry her own suitcase and handle her own hysterics.”
REVIEW:
The inside
cover blurb for this book declares it “combines suspense and romance in a
compelling novel,” and this is a very accurate description. Front and center is
a mystery about who is trying to frame Nurse Carol Bond, while in the
background a romance blooms between Carol and a young attorney trying to clear
her name. Throughout we are treated with some really fine writing by an author
who was known for penning the original 24 Avenger novels. At the end of the
day, though, it’s more mystery than romance, so I feel compelled to mark it
down slightly.
Nurse Carol Bond is on her way home from work as a private duty nurse on the evening shift when she happens upon a car crash. Two men from one of the cars lie on the pavement, rapidly shuffling off this mortal coil. There is another woman who pops up to help Carol tend the victims, who are both dead within 15 minutes of her arrival. But who died first? And why would anyone care? Well, one of the men, George Caldwell, was a very wealthy businessman, while the other, Dr. Henry Ebon, was his not-so-rich best friend. Caldwell’s will leaves his very large estate to Dr. Ebon, but if the doctor predeceases him, the estate goes to his extended family. And Carol is quite certain that Caldwell died first, of a sucking chest wound.
The next day, a delivery boy drops off a luxurious mink stole at Carol’s apartment. Carol’s best friend Arlene—the wise-cracking, smartass type—tries to help Carol figure out who might have given to her: “I’ve got it. A grateful patient. Someone whose fevered brow you’ve cooled recently.” A few days later, Carol receives a notice from the bank in the mail stating that her account has been credited with a cash deposit of $1,000. What could all this be about? Summoned to Caldwell’s attorney’s office that afternoon, it quickly becomes clear: Someone who might have benefited from Caldwell’s estate is using these anonymous gifts to throw suspicion on Carol’s testimony. The attorney for Dr. Ebon’s estate, Andy Stewart, quickly comes to appreciate Carol’s veracity, and her figure. Soon he is leading to chase all over town for clues and suspects, with Carol acting as Dr. Watson.
It really is a
very entertaining book, with excellent writing from the first paragraph:
“Cocked up at a crazy angle was a single beam, piercing the midnight sky like a
slanted finger.” Carol is a sturdy, competent character, who “did not have that
nice firm little chin for nothing.” She can figure a few things out for herself
and isn’t just led around by Andy in their pursuit of the truth and the guilty
party. The answer to the mystery is not easily deduced, and the plotting moves
along at a good pace, but not so fast you can’t follow each development. Again,
my only real problem with the book is that the romance is the most predictable
and boring aspect of it, revealed in fairly plain prose such as “Carol was
beginning to think that perhaps they added up to something more than average.”
And I really wish we had spent a lot more time with bestie Arlene, who was by
far the most interesting character in the book. If you are looking for a VNRN
that is not at all the usual fare, this book exactly fits that bill, and if the
ending is sealed with a charming kiss, we can only wish that there had been
more of that elsewhere in the book.
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