This is an outstanding installment in the series. It has everything I appreciate in a book of its type—some courtroom drama, moments when everything seems hopeless, and times when good people win despite the incredible odds stacked against them.
The young widow isn’t addicted to gambling, but on a summer night in Lake Tahoe, she’s playing the slots. She took the chair when someone with a British accent vacated it to use the bathroom. Jessie Potter’s life would never be the same again. As she fed money into the machine, it announced that she had hit the jackpot. She won seven million dollars and change. But Jessie has a problem. Her father-in-law is convinced that she murdered her husband by poisoning him, and the old man has vowed to make her life as miserable as possible. He doesn’t know Jessie has a son by her husband, and she’s terrified if he finds out, he’ll take the child away.
Benny Leung sits next to Jessie that night. He’s there to play his last dollar before escaping to one of the hotel rooms upstairs to take his life. He brought his handgun just for that purpose. He has gambled away his parents’ savings and lost everything. Or has he? Jessie hires Nina Reilly to both help her secure the jackpot withheld by the manufacturer of the slot machine until the manufacturer can test it for integrity and to protect her name so the child’s grandfather can’t take it.
Benny and Jessie agree to marry in a quick Reno ceremony, and she’ll pay off his gambling debts in return for the use of his name.
The bodies pile up as Nina works to unfreeze Jessie’s money, and Nina deals with domestic difficulties of her own.