In Stanton’s thriller, an American falls for an Argentine woman whose dark family secrets may prove deadly.
In 1990, Los Angeles newspaper journalist Robert Wells catches a flight to Buenos Aires. On the day he lands, he meets Gabriela Roca Dafiume, a 20-something doctor who immediately helps him forget his recent divorce. She lives with her parents and her younger brother and is largely secretive; she doesn’t answer all of Robert’s questions and seems intent on keeping him away from her home. Things take a startling turn when Robert receives friendly warnings to avoid Gabriela’s family and full-on threats are left at his hotel. But the couple’s romance only deepens, both physically and emotionally. They can’t hide their relationship from her father, César Roca Steele, whom Gabriela describes as “possessive.” There’s a chance he already knows about them, as he likely has people following Robert and Gabriela. If it’s true César had something to do with one of Gabriela’s past lovers disappearing, then Robert is in serious danger. Stanton’s slow-burn story develops an absorbing romance. The couple’s shared scenes gradually intensify, and it’s easy to understand why Robert doesn’t hightail it back to L.A. A sinister tone pervades the narrative; César always seems to know where Robert is or what he’s up to, making Robert’s plan to unearth proof of wrongdoing all the more unnerving. Further reinforcing the novel’s suspense is a mystery surrounding the generally tight-lipped Roca family involving Gabriela and her brother, a priest. Throughout the narrative, the author aptly details Buenos Aires and its people. One passage memorably evoking life outside the lovers’ bedroom describes “aromas of coffee, tucos or tomato sauces, chitterlings and churrascos from the neighbors’ kitchens” and “windblown fig leaves rubbing like sandpaper against the balcony.”
An unforgiving past becomes a present-day menace in this gripping romantic thriller.