A young woman hired to spy on a diplomat falls in love with her target in Audsley’s novel.
In 2006, Christine Wilson is working at a restaurant in London. After an altercation with a manager, she is fired. Christine’s friend, Marci, connects her to a man, Mr Bresckin, who hires Christine to collect information about an American named Daniel Kestreller. Christine starts following Daniel and ends up in a lift with him in the Queensway tube station, where he seduces her. They continue to see each other afterward. Daniel works as a project manager for the U.S. foreign service and uses his diplomatic connections to help Christine get a new job with a celebrity chef. They continue to get to know each other—going to dinner, drinking wine, attending an embassy party, and taking a trip to France. (There’s also some intrigue related to Daniel’s job going on in the background.) Eventually, Christine has to come clean about what she was up to when they met. At this point, Daniel apologetically breaks into Christine’s narration and says that she “feels (unnecessarily, in my opinion) a bit embarrassed by the whole thing,” as if the two characters are writing the novel together. This gives away the game: They are together in the future, recounting the events in this narrative. The prologue details Christine’s sister’s death, but this doesn’t have much bearing on the story—in fact, the plot never really goes anywhere, which is the novel’s main flaw. There’s tension between Christine and Daniel after she confesses to stalking him, but there are no real consequences. While the prose is chatty, light, and engaging, the narrative doesn’t quite hang together—there’s a weird supernatural side trip involving Christine’s late grandmother and a psychic, for example, and Marci is a terrible friend to Christine (which feels unintentional on the author’s part); Christine seems unfazed by it. The diplomatic intrigue heats up in the last third of the book, but it feels disconnected from the rest of the story.
A disjointed international romance.