I had forgotten how much early Roarke could sometimes SERIOUSLY piss me off, to the point where I nearly shit-canned the series after one of the earlier books.
Well, he's early Roarke in this book (and in the short I read just before this - "Ritual in Death"), and he was a dickhead. He can just get a wild hair up his ass and become adamant that his viewpoint is the only relevant one. It happens on a dime, like a knee-jerk reaction to something, and he becomes a total asshole about it. He inserts himself into Eve's job - does she ever do that to him? Why no, no she doesn't, because apparently it's just men who know all things and can do everyone's job better than the silly woman can - and is a pigheaded shit about it. He makes it all about him, this whole Homeland thing (a thing that pissed me off in the earlier book in the series where Homeland's involvement with her father and childhood were the big reveal, and even though IT IS NOT ABOUT HIM, the entire book was all this drama over his reaction to the reveal and what he needs to build a bridge and get the fuck over it), and frankly, it is bullshit. It is, again, not about him. It isn't his past, his trauma, his baggage. His role here is to SUPPORT Eve, because it is HER past, her trauma, her baggage, her life. Just like she supports him when it is his past popping up in one of these books.
So yeah, it was damn tedious that in this case, which has not a goddamn thing to do with him and what he needs, he is again leaping in to pick a fight with Eve about how she does her job, and making it all about him.
I liked the story, the espionage, the people. But man, I did not like revisiting early Roarke.
**2.5**