A Los Angeles security guard’s act of heroism comes back to bite her.
Justine Poole is just doing her job when she follows Jerry and Estelle Pinsky from a fundraiser to their gated home and foils a robbery attempt by five men, two of whom she shoots dead. But that’s not how Mr. Conger, the crime boss who hired the crew for the job, sees it. He needs to maintain the reputation of his operation by making a strong statement about what happens to anybody who thwarts his plans. So even as Justine’s name springs into local headlines and she’s asked to do press interviews she has no intention of giving, methodical assassin Leo Sealy has already accepted a $50,000 down payment to liquidate her. After he kills her boss, Ben Spengler, instead of her, Spengler’s siblings terminate Justine’s contract to insulate Spengler-Nash Security from further fallout and warn her away from any contact with the co-workers who might have helped protect her. Needing an ally, Justine picks out crime reporter Joe Alston, who proves surprisingly helpful considering how little she tells him. In the meantime, Conger kicks things up a notch by encouraging the three thieves the police caught to claim they were ambushed by a vigilante, entangling Justine with the police and further tarnishing her reputation while Sealy draws a bead on her. When the skill sets of the hunted and the hunter, who reflects that Justine is “more of a problem than most,” are so evenly matched, luck will play a decisive role, and Justine’s luck can’t hold out forever.
A cat-and-mouse tale done to a turn by a veteran who doesn’t waste a word or a tear.