Mary, the mysterious character from Hidden Cove (2019), the third volume of Tilly's Solace Island series, unmasks herself as Sarah Rainsford, a wealthy heiress running away from her violent, abusive husband.
Sarah and her cat, Charlie, are on the run and stuck in Los Angeles with no money. Sarah's parents were killed in a car crash. In their will, they left her hundreds of millions of dollars sewed up in a trust her brutal husband, Kevin, cannot touch. In a black rage, he beats pregnant Sarah until she begins to hemorrhage and loses her baby. Because of a fairly unbelievable complication, Sarah can't get a divorce because she has no personal papers to prove her identity. Her old family lawyer, the increasingly pernicious Phillip, has never sent her the documents she needs. Four years later, Kevin is viciously pursuing her, hoping to take Sarah alive and submissive. Sarah's a survivor. Using a fake ID, dyeing her hair, and calling herself Rachel Jones, she's hired as a live-in personal assistant to Mick Talford, a famous young Hollywood director and notorious hell-raiser living in an exclusive LA canyon mansion. Tilly, a Golden Globe–winning actress, has firmly established herself as a romance writer, and though she's been away from the Hollywood scene for a long time, she clearly knows the territory. Mick might be living the dream, but he grew up with his grandmother, a madam who ran a brothel in the Nevada desert. And he knows that Sarah, who is clearly a class act from the East Coast, is in trouble. He also starts to enjoy having someone around. But one day, while Sarah is out getting the fixings for apple pie, she sees police officers checking out her license plate, and she knows that Kevin, also a cop, has found her. Mick gains Sarah's trust, and the pair set off to repair her life as Kevin the villain, who has now drowned a friend of Mick's, pursues them. Tilly has a skillful way of interweaving a suspenseful thriller with the growing love that Sarah and Mick have for each other. But even with a plot twist at the end, the happily-ever-after is trite and contrived.
Tilly is great at writing suspense and creating strong heroines, but her book deserved a better ending.