Two Girls Down by Louisa Luna
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Louise Luna’s Two Girls Down is an excellent, thrilling P.I. novel. Both protagonists, Cap and Vega, are well-drawn, complex characters. Cap, a disgraced former cop, is likeable and serves as the voice of reason for Vega, an ex-bounty hunter who now specializes in finding missing persons, mostly kids. Vega is has her demons, but Cap may just be the one to exorcise them in time. The plot begins as mundane but horrifying–two sisters, eight and ten disappear from a strip mall in a small Pennsylvania city. Vega, the specialist, is called in by the family who don’t trust local law enforcement, and she recruits Cap for his local knowledge. The action is believable for the most part, although Vega’s nebulous hacker, who provides the team with key info just as needed, every time, is a bit of stretch, as is the willingness of the local cops to accept Cap and Vega as partners in the investigation. The twist at the end also strains credulity a bit, but the writing is so damn good that I’m willing to let it slide. I see that Cap and Vega are going to return for a second outing in 2020, and I’ll definitely be buying that book as well.
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