

Kindle edition: 226 pages.
Book Description:
Sequel to bestselling novels Diversion and Collusion.
Renegade biker. Drug runner. Recovering addict. Wanted by the Southeastern Narcotics Bureau. But he isn’t a crook, he’s the law.
SNB Agent Bo Schollenberger’s solved his cases using his brains and not a gun, and with his partner, not alone. Now he’s handed a tough new case involving designer drugs that turn users violent. One false move could end his life as he immerses himself into a motorcycle gang to locate the source. His fate depends on how well he can impersonate someone else. Someone named Cyrus Cooper.
Cyrus is everything Bo Schollenberger isn’t, including the badass enforcer for a smuggling ring. He establishes pecking order with his fists and doesn’t take shit from anybody, not even the undercover agent who comes to help his case.
Simon “Lucky” Harrison’s always been the best, whichever side of the law he was on. Former trafficker turned SNB agent, he damned well ought to be undercover in this motorcycle gang, instead of hanging around the office going crazy with new policies, new people, and “inter-departmental cooperation” that sticks him in a classroom. Yet he’s passed over for the SNB’s biggest case in decades in favor of the rookie who shares his bed. A man Lucky thought he knew.
When survival depends on a web of tangled lies, lines blur, worlds collide, and a high stakes game turns friend to foe. Lucky knows the difference between Bo the agent and Cyrus the outlaw, but does Bo?
My Opinion:
Third book in the series. For all the action/suspense of a the drug enforcement team the center of the book is about a couple trying to make it work.
Story is from Lucky's POV. He's an amusing snarky character. I enjoy the just of position between his cocky work persona versus his timid, hesitant actions when moving forward in his relationship with Bo.
Bo continues to be fleshed out and I feel as if the character is still evolving. He has a much stronger presence in this third installment.
There are a few hiccups in this book... The role playing sequences between the two characters felt off. For when the M/C are together I would think they would want to be their true selves since for work they're always pretending to be someone else.
So, a nice third installment. Ready and waiting for the forth.
A solid 3.5 stars.