Dark Horse
by
Tami Hoag
Order:
USA
Can
Bantam, 2004 (2002)
Hardcover, Paperback, Audio, CD, e-Book
Reviewed by J. A. Kaszuba Locke
I
n
Dark Horse
, Tami Hoag exploits her skills as an accomplished equestrian in an intriguing mystery. Her protagonist, Elena Estes, is a former narcotics police detective, whose courageous efforts during a stake-out resulted in a colleague's death. As a result, she suffered extensive psychological and physical damage, and sacrificed her job.
N
ow 12-year-old,
wise beyond her age
Molly Seabright wants to hire the ex-cop to find her missing 18-year old sister Erin, who was employed as a groom for stable owner/trainer Don Jade. Molly is the only one in her dysfunctional family to be convinced that Erin is in danger. Estes, who retreated to West Palm Beach, Florida's professional horse-competition country, does not have a private investigator license. She has no interest in pursuing a new career, nor the desire to leave her self-imposed exile. But the more she learns about the people Erin was involved with, the more her police instincts are triggered. Elena decides to help Molly when a trip to the show grounds where Erin worked reveals the dark side of the glamorous horse world, involving drugs, payoffs, and cutthroat transactions.
T
he murder of young Jill Morone (another of Jade's grooms), attempts on Elena's life, and insurance claims for the supposedly accidental deaths of horses, add up to danger in a world of high money and high stakes. Suspects abound. They include horse and stable owners, a Belgian horse dealer who preys on women's naiveté, Don Jade and assistant trainer Paris Montgomery, and a groom from Russia. Elena approaches Detective James Landry, who first waives interest in the case because of Estes' past with the police department. With growing evidence, and a rise in the body count, Landry develops a reluctant respect for the brash Estes, and protectively assists her.
T
ami Hoag delivers a suspense-filled ride leading to a finish that isn't over until it's over! Though some readers may find too much description here for their taste, it works for me, creating a vivid dramatization in my mind's eye. Hoag expresses herself through Estes' fine words: '
I don't like or trust coincidence ... Energy attracts energy, intent becomes a force of nature, and there is no such thing as coincidence.
' To Detective Landry, Elena says, '
Never bet on a dark horse. You'll tear up the ticket nine times out of ten.
'
Dark Horse
is a superior read from a classy author, who gives her characters guts and heart, and shows us that '
Life can change in a heartbeat.
'
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