Nash Novak, a struggling Seattle businesswoman who has been framed for arson and murder, is in desperate need of money for her defense. The only way for her to get it: A coffee plantation she has inherited. But there's a catch: She has to run the plantation, deep in the jungles of Colombia, a land of drug lords and warlords.The mysterious inheritance of the plantation, from the father she had never met, comes at the same time a criminal conspiracy is turning her life into a living hell--a conspiracy that stretches all the way to Colombia. Racing to South America, on the run from the police, she becomes entangled with suspicious characters: Ramon, rich and handsome, with a secret sex life that shocks even Nash though she considers herself an adventurous woman; Josh, an American expatriate, who claims to be a simple gem smuggler and arouses passions in Nash she thought were long dead; and Lily Soong, an erotic Chinese beauty who men--and women--lust after, often to their doom.But no one brings as much danger to her life as Pablo Escobar, king of the Medellin drug cartels, considered the most dangerous man in Colombia, the murder capital of the world. Things get even more complicated when Nash's quest to clear herself takes her to Shanghai, home of the powerful Chinese Triads that control the flow of dirty money from gambling, prostitution, drugs and murder.Refusing to let the cartel's murderers drive her off the plantation and ruin the lives of hundreds of families who work it, Nash tackles organized crime and police agencies on two continents to save her plantation . . . "and stay""alive." "
Nash Novak runs a coffee shop in Seattle. One day her shop burns down and the very same day she learns she has inherited a coffee plantation in Colombia. While the police suspects her of burning down her own shop, she flees to Colombia to visit the plantation. Turns out local gangsters has some interest in the plantation and Nash finds herself in a lot of trouble. Podrug has done his research and lots of historical detail lend some authenticity to the story, but also sometimes slow down the pace; it's a matter of taste if you think this is good or bad. I liked it most of the time. Sex is to be expected from a novel with Robbin's name on it, and this is no exception. However, the part where Nash tells about her first sexual experience at age 16 had absolutely nothing to do with the story and should have been edited out. Occasionally, some information is repeated and a good editor could have fixed this too. On the whole, however, "The Devil to Pay" is an entertaining novel and Podrug's description of a country controlled by drug lords like Pablo Escobar is fascinating. 4-
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