Anonymous wrote:Thank you so much for explaining the Miss Smith reference at the end - I was glued to the book the whole time but that threw me right at the end. So yes of course Lucca/Evie and Amy are partnering up as Lucca is taking over Mr. Smith/George’s business after his unfortunate demise - yep make sense - so it’s just sort of a joke that Amy makes at the end of the story to let the reader know what happened to Mr. Smith’s transport business and all his employees - they have a new boss! There could totally be a sequel to this story - I’d love it! Maybe how Evie and Amy and Ryan might merge their operations and clients to work together and then a disgruntled operative or client from the past or a Smith relative shows up for a hostile takeover or something else super sinister!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't usually read this genre, and I found it a little confusing. Spoilers ahead!
I think there was only one person who was all bad: Mr. Smith.
Her husband did have a shady business, but was not trying to screw her over.
The woman who "allegedly" died in the fire was on her side the whole time. The fight in the bar was a set-up and when the narrator started the fire, she snuck out in a housekeeping cart.
The friend (I can't remember his name -- George?) was innocent, and rode off into the sunset.
She and the husband stayed together, doing something private investigator/spy/scam related.
That's what I got from it, but I could be wrong!
I thought George was mr Smith!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One other thing: Original Lucca was supposed to share info with Mr. Smith that would have compromised Ryan, but she altered the data so Mr. Smith couldn’t get him. That’s how Ryan knew that she actually did have real feelings for him. It’s somewhat of a mirror with what happened with the Tennessee governor.
Thank you, PP for your explanations! This was a book that I didn't enjoy at first, but I'm glad I didn't drop it in the beginning. I really liked it and thought if was a fun ride with lots of twists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't usually read this genre, and I found it a little confusing. Spoilers ahead!
I think there was only one person who was all bad: Mr. Smith.
Her husband did have a shady business, but was not trying to screw her over.
The woman who "allegedly" died in the fire was on her side the whole time. The fight in the bar was a set-up and when the narrator started the fire, she snuck out in a housekeeping cart.
The friend (I can't remember his name -- George?) was innocent, and rode off into the sunset.
She and the husband stayed together, doing something private investigator/spy/scam related.
That's what I got from it, but I could be wrong!
I thought George was mr Smith!
Anonymous wrote:I don't usually read this genre, and I found it a little confusing. Spoilers ahead!
I think there was only one person who was all bad: Mr. Smith.
Her husband did have a shady business, but was not trying to screw her over.
The woman who "allegedly" died in the fire was on her side the whole time. The fight in the bar was a set-up and when the narrator started the fire, she snuck out in a housekeeping cart.
The friend (I can't remember his name -- George?) was innocent, and rode off into the sunset.
She and the husband stayed together, doing something private investigator/spy/scam related.
That's what I got from it, but I could be wrong!
Anonymous wrote:One other thing: Original Lucca was supposed to share info with Mr. Smith that would have compromised Ryan, but she altered the data so Mr. Smith couldn’t get him. That’s how Ryan knew that she actually did have real feelings for him. It’s somewhat of a mirror with what happened with the Tennessee governor.
Anonymous wrote:SPOILER ALERT!
Do you think George ( the guy who went to the bank and was hauled away by the mob people) was actually Mr. Smith or was Mr. Smith the husband? Do they call her Miss Smith in the end because she takes over the operations or bc her husband was the real Mr. Smith?