Ashley Elston. First Lie Wins. USA: Viking/Penguin Random House LLC, 2024.
Evie Porter is moving in with successful financial planner Ryan Sumner, into his lovely old family home, and she seems as completely in love as he does. But we know from the beginning that Evie has a hidden agenda—she’s never shown Ryan where she lives, and her past has been carefully fabricated to fool any internet snoopers. Ryan’s old friends, especially Rachel the lawyer, are suspicious that she’s a gold-digger; if they only knew the truth! Evie (not her real name) was given the job of gleaning information about Ryan’s other business, Glenview Trucking, a front for criminal enterprise—after months of preparation in her new identity. Her boss/instructor Mr Smith is not FBI or anyone acting for the public good; he’s more or less blackmailing her into illicit actions on behalf of his clients. Evie has been very good at what she does. But she may be headed for trouble because she’s genuinely attracted to Ryan who adores her.
As if Evie’s job wasn’t delicate and nerve-wracking enough, enter diabolus ex machina: at a social event among Ryan’s friends, Evie meets a woman posing in her real ID: Lucca Marino. “Lucca” even physically resembles Evie; Mr Smith seems to be playing games with her. Having performed previous long-term jobs, and not one to be bullied, Evie risks danger by modifying the rules her way. However, she’s shocked when Lucca dies in a car crash. A police investigation into the accident escalates the tension—did Mr Smith engineer Lucca’s death? Is Evie being framed for it? Will the cops uncover her fake ID? Can she still keep Ryan from learning her ulterior purpose?
More than one suspicious identity throws confusion into the twisting course. Each visit to Evie’s past assignments is a jewel of a plot in its own right, spinning clues for her goal of unmasking Mr Smith and leaving this chancy business. A superb nail-biter; I’m eager to see Elston’s next brilliant work.
First Lie Wins
There’s an old saying: The first lie wins. It’s not referring to the little white kind that tumble out with no thought; it refers to the big one. The one that changes the game. The one that is deliberate. The lie that sets the stage for everything that comes after it. And once the lie is told, it’s what most people believe to be true. The first lie has to be the strongest. The most important. The one that has to be told. (27)
Bits and Lies
▪ In this line of work, being replaced doesn’t mean you’re let go without a letter of recommendation. Even if I don’t know Mr Smith’s real name, I know enough that I don’t get to just walk away. (83)
▪ I’m going back over everything to discover why Mr Smith chose Ryan Sumner and this job to test me. (90)
▪ Ryan adds before I can stop him, “Evie just moved here from Brookwood, Alabama, a few months ago.” (136)
▪ I now have a handful of well-respected, God-fearing politicians in my back pocket. A senator, a couple of congressmen, several mayors and state legislators. (179)
▪ As a condition of being released, I was photographed and fingerprinted, so now not only am I in the system for the first time ever, I’m in the system as Evie Porter. (180)
▪ “And I’m supposed to believe you’ll call off the dogs if I show you the contents of the safe deposit box?” (185)
▪ “Give him what he wants. I don’t want to do what he’ll ask me to do if you don’t.” (250)
▪ “Fuck, something’s got her spooked.” Ryan’s voice fills the space and I freeze. They’ve moved a little closer to me. (259)
Neil Lancaster. When Shadows Fall. UK: HQ/HarperCollins, 2025.
Ah yes, the Scottish police team starring DS Max Craigie (Novels No. 56), the anti-corruption unit within the force. In a chance moment Max’s old friend Shay, a mountain search and rescue pilot, consults him about an odd death in the Cairngorms. A woman’s body was found at the base of a cliff, looking like a fatal fall, no witnesses. Even as Max tells his team about it, a second body is found in similar circumstances. DI Ross, Max’s partner Janie, analyst Norma, and their crack IT friend Barney discuss how six women could meet the same fate in a relatively short period of time. Little or no real investigation took place at each occurrence so the situation calls for this team. The women were all about the same age, novice climbers who never should have gone out alone, and who had posted their plans on social media. Barney’s magic on one woman’s smashed phone gives them a face and a name, Silver Fox, turning their focus onto internet dating sites.
Fast arrangements are made for DC Janie’s first undercover role, as bait. In the quickest-ever dating hookup, she goes to meet “Mikey Fox” at a ski centre for a climbing lesson—with plenty of hidden backup. But whoa: shockingly, Mikey not only out-foxes them, avoiding the concealed police, he shoves another innocent woman to her death. Max and Ross are furious that an informant must be involved; surely not police corruption? They get only more frantic when Barney finds his way into a misplaced laptop with its dark web conversations. This killer is not going to stop. The detectives don’t know yet that catching Mikey is merely the top layer of a deep conspiracy. Max is under double pressure: the job is triggering his PTSD, and wife Katie is due to give birth any moment.
Internet wizards Barney and pal Clive can hack anything; nerds will love the technical language. I’d forgotten how the author peppers every chapter with dumbfounding Police Scotland acronyms but the fun is in the Scots vernacular and the potty-mouth camaraderie—until it wears thin. Suspense, yes; plot, pretty straightforward with a few disbelief leaps.
Bits
▪ “I think someone is stalking Facebook groups, and picking off lone climbers.” (26)
▪ “Well, I can’t get in the normal way, so all the connections must be cream-crackered.” Barney lifted his cup and drank deeply. (70)
▪ “Question is for us, with our counter-corruption ninja hats on, and looking at this in the round, is whether it’s deliberate, careless, or something much worse.” (78)
▪ “Someone leaked what we were doing and yet Mikey whatever his name is still came. This evil bastard is playing games. Worse than that, he’s fucking taunting us.” (112)
▪ “It is a genuine warrant card, you stupid bastards. You’ve got nothing, and you know nothing at all,” he continued to guffaw. (162)
▪ “Hands on head, dickhead, or you’re getting fried,” yelled PC Lennox as he advanced, Taser outstretched in his hands, as the laser dot quivered on the attacker’s chest. (162)
▪ Ross’s brow bristled menacingly. “Man’s a total fucking wankspangle. Telling me he wants the computer product for interview.” (215)
▪ “I was running brute force along with a rainbow table, which was sensible of me, as that was what cracked it.” (231)