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Two priceless paintings. Two million euros. A civil war. What could go wrong?

The DeWitt Agency assigned disgraced ex-cop Carson a simple job: carry two briefcases of cash to swap for two artworks stolen from a German museum. Except nothing’s simple in the Donbass, the breakaway Ukrainian region overrun by militias, warlords, and bandits.

After a brutal zrada – betrayal – Carson finds herself alone and hunted forty miles behind the front lines with half the money, one of the paintings, and a huge target hung on her back. The militia behind the exchange thinks she blew up their deal and wants the money and her hide. Her co-workers were in on the double-cross. And the Agency can’t send help into the hottest war in Europe.

Carson’s never been one to wait to be rescued. She hires Galina – a tough local with a harrowing past and a taste for revenge – to help her cut through every checkpoint, freelance army, crooked cop, and firefight between her and the West. But the road to safety is long and poorly paved. A vengeful militia commander, a Russian special-forces operator with an agenda, and her own ex-colleagues have Carson in their crosshairs.

Carson’s life is now worth less than a suitcase of money or paint on a plank…but if they want to take it from her, she’s going to make them pay.

312 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 6, 2020

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About the author

Lance Charnes

7 books93 followers
I’ve been an Air Force intelligence officer, information technology manager, computer-game artist, set designer, Jeopardy! contestant, and now an emergency management specialist. I've had training in architectural rendering, terrorist incident response, and maritime archaeology, although not all at the same time. My Facebook author page (https://www.facebook.com/Lance.Charne...) features spies, archaeology, and art crime.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Werner.
Author 4 books647 followers
November 28, 2020
Lance Charnes and I are Goodreads friends, and I've read and liked two of his earlier novels; so he offered me a free review copy of this newly-published book. (There wasn't any guarantee that I'd also like this one, but he does know my tastes pretty well.) The opener for a projected new series, this tale spins off from the author's DeWitt Agency Files, and Carson (no first name!), the protagonist here, is an important character in the opener for the first series, The Collection. (This review avoids spoilers for Zrada, but might have some for the former novel.) The DeWitt “Agency” operates on the edge (and sometimes over the edge) of legality in the world of super-expensive art objects trade, a milieu with a decidedly dark underbelly, which the author has thoroughly researched. But, besides the change from a male to a female protagonist, where I classified the original series as crime fiction, I'd classify this one more as straight action-adventure. The emphasis here isn't on art, the mechanics of art swindles, etc.; the art in the story is more of a McGuffin, with the emphasis on action, danger, derring-do, weapons and explosions. (This book is set in 2016, the same year The Collection was published, and the author establishes that the events in the latter have already happened.)

Ex-cop Carson (she's divorced, but still uses her married name) is a complex, thoroughly round and very distinctive character, and a highly private person with her share of secrets. (We get to know her here in much more depth than we do in The Collection, though she was also well-realized there.) Abrasive, prickly, potty-mouthed and tough as nails, she works as a mercenary for Allyson DeWitt, and also hires out, albeit reluctantly, as an occasional hit woman for a Russian mob boss, in order to protect family who are under his gun –though she does draw a firm line in the sand against harming innocents. As that suggests, there's more moral depth to her than you might at first think; she's actually a person of very real integrity and honor. She's got a conscience that she listens to; her word's her bond, and she cares about people, though she doesn't trust or make friends easily.

This time out, Carson's mission is legally and ethically unobjectionable. Back in 2009, two valuable 15th-century paintings were stolen in a burglary at a German museum. Now, they've fallen into the hands of a Chechen fence, who's wiling to return them to the legal owner –for 2 million Euros. If he made that exchange in any peaceful, law-abiding country with an honest and functional police force, he'd be arrested in minutes. So, he's set up the meeting in the lawless, war-ravaged Donbass, Ukraine's break-away Eastern region, and cut a cash-strapped (but well-armed) rebel militia into the deal as his partners. The DeWitt Agency is handling the swap. Our heroine's job is to deliver the cash safely, act as bodyguard for the museum staffer who can authenticate the paintings, and bring both of the latter back intact, come hell or high water. Besides being obviously combat-capable, she landed the assignment because she speaks both Ukrainian and Russian; though raised in Canada, she's of Ukrainian stock (her maiden name was Tarasenko). As the book opens, she, the museum expert, and the Agency's local “associate” and his two minions are pulling into the meeting place. Her nerves are on edge; a LOT of wealth is going to be on the table here, and she's surrounded by hungry, desperate strangers (or people she knows to be morally dubious) for many miles around. (And readers who know Ukrainian won't be reassured by the book title; it's the word for “betrayal”....)

Ukraine is the poorest nation in Europe (and one of the most corrupt), but still fields the continent's third largest military. It has a long, complex history, during which its borders have fluctuated wildly, and it's home to a variety of ethnic groups, some of whom don't much like or trust each other, usually because they have mutual genuine grievances and not wholly unfounded fears of repeat behavior. Also, it's always had much stronger powers with hegemonial aspirations to both its east and west, which have often found the country's ethnic fissures exploitable and deliberately exacerbated them. At times it has lost its independence, in whole or in part, sometimes for centuries. The present situation can't be fully understood apart from all of this. However, what we get for background in the book is two short paragraphs starting with 2013, where Carson fills in the museum guy based on the “agency backgrounder” she read. Okay, that's about all she'd be realistically expected to know; many action-adventure fans don't give a care about history or politics (apart from “US against THEM!”) anyway, and nobody likes info-dumps. Still, a very deep background this isn't, and it's also from a U.S. military intelligence (in which the author was formerly an officer) perspective, which provides both a lot of factual knowledge of immediately current events and a certain slant on them. I don't doubt for a minute that the Russian government/military leaders are as self-serving, corrupt and Machiavellian as they're portrayed as being, and capable of doing all of the ugly actions depicted (plus a few that aren't in the book, but which you can read about elsewhere); nor that sleazy business moguls in the Donbass exploit the civil war to get rich off of slave labor –like some of their counterparts in the West, though the latter are usually shrewd enough to keep the slaves out of sight in the Third World. But I do doubt that the EU, which is alluded to here briefly in one sentence, the U.S. government, the IMF –Ukraine's its fourth largest debtor in the world-- the multinational corporations that basically run all three (none of which are mentioned here at all), and whatever Ukrainian faction they're currently financing and “advising” are just innocent bystanders, or noble altruists merely trying to make the world safe for democracy. If the book piques your interest in the country, my recommendation is to use it as an informative springboard for further reading, not as a definitive and comprehensive treatise.

Here as in The Collection, Lance writes in the present tense; this takes a moment or two of getting used to if your mind is expecting past tense. But I've encountered this technique before in a number of books, so adjusted quickly; and it does create a sense of “you-are-there” immediacy. The plotting has its twists and turns, but it's mostly quite believable; it's also focused on one strand, though from different perspectives, and tautly compressed in time, occupying just nine days. Narration is in third-person, but in the vocabulary of whatever character is the current viewpoint one (usually Carson, if she's present). For me, it wasn't a quick read; the author's prose style is straightforward, but there are a lot of Slavic personal and place names (a character list and real-world map of the geographical setting is provided) and references to unfamiliar-to-me types of guns and military hardware to wade through, and I found myself reading more carefully to pick up details of description and action. However, it's a very gripping, involving read which quickly engaged me emotionally. The narrative pace itself is quite fast, and while the action isn't “non-stop” (any book in which it actually is would by definition be pretty shallow otherwise, which this one definitely isn't!), there's a lot of it, steadily punctuating the narrative. Vivid, realistic and well-realized action scenes are one of this author's fortes. An even more important one is development of nuanced characters who come to life as understandable people, on both sides of the country's civil war. For instance, the militia characters are not cartoon villains, or necessarily “villains” at all, as such. Some characters definitely ARE villains (though not cartoonish ones), but even they may have an admixture of better qualities along with their sleaze. Fans of action heroines here will have the added plus of meeting another fighting female, ex-Ukrainian National Guard soldier Galina, who's far from a Carson clone (she's a developed, distinct character in her own right), but who can more than pull her weight in a combat situation.

There's no sex here, just some passing references to past sexual activity (Carson's trust issues and low opinion of marriage and males, which her one try at the former didn't help, give her the ratchet towards commitment-free flings that you'd expect). A number of characters have foul mouths, often shaped by military culture (both Ukrainian and Russian have an exact parallel to the American f-word, which the author translates :-( ), but that's realistic for the character types, and, refreshingly, not everybody does. Despite the cruelty and greed often in evidence here, this is at its core a profoundly moral novel, whose messages (delivered by example rather than sermonizing) encourage readers to be kinder, less selfish, more honest and caring in their treatment of other people. My main quibble was with decisions by a couple of characters that, IMO, served the plot rather than being in character and/or very smart (and Carson's not stupid!) But that doesn't keep me from highly recommending this to action fans.
Profile Image for 3 no 7.
746 reviews22 followers
November 10, 2020
Ransoming a painting is very complicated in the midst of a war.

“Zrada” by Lance Charnes features Carson, a former police detective, who is now a take-no-prisoners operative working for the DeWitt Agency. Her current assignment has taken her to a war-torn area of Ukraine to ransom two valuable paintings stolen from a prominent museum. The deal is done; the exchange is set; but nothing goes as planned. Warring factions clash in efforts to acquire both the ransom money and the paintings, and to probably end Carson’s life in the process. The political conspiracy is complex, however, and involves more than just getting back a couple of paintings.

The plot proceeds at a frantic pace, taking place over just a few days. Carson is enmeshed in non-stop action right from the start, and just when readers think things have quieted down a bit, another shock comes along. The characters are complex and diverse including foreigners, nationals, rebels, and of course Carson who is trying to escape them all. Chapters identify the main point of view, and there is a convenient cast list to help readers track the people and their official roles. The geography of Ukraine also plays a critical role, and countryside, cityscape, and geographic landmarks are distinctively described.

“Zrada” is a non-stop fight-to-the-finish filled with guns, gore, and glory. Carson is strong, determined, focused, and driven to win. I received a review copy of “Zrada” from Lance Charnes and The Wombat Group. It is gripping and dangerous which made it quick to read because I could not put it down. This is the first in Charnes’ new action-adventure series featuring Carson; I am sure there will be more non-stop action for her in the future.
Profile Image for Kay Churgel.
244 reviews
May 29, 2022
Rating - 3.6. Very gory. But interesting plot. Interesting to be immersed in Ukraine’s confusing political and war-time machinations - Russians, Kyiv corruption, brigades, Nationalists, militias, etc. And this is before Putin’s recent “military action”/war.
Profile Image for Helen.
456 reviews4 followers
October 11, 2021
A fast paced plot which takes place over a few days, with plenty of twists and turns.
Interesting and complex characters, especially the lead female, Carson, she's an ex-cop working as a mercenary for Alyson DeWitt. Carson is determined, strong and driven with her share of secrets. Plenty of action throughout.
Profile Image for Mik Wasiak.
209 reviews2 followers
March 20, 2022
good thriller with interesting character trying to start over in life I got this book for free and honest review
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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