by Susan Stoker
“He’s here, Mags. And unlike my own relatives, he hasn’t ever stopped trying to find you.”
“Ten years,” he said softly. “Ten years, twenty-two days, four hours, and thirty-six minutes. That’s how long you’ve been missing. And I’ve been searching for you for every single second of that time. I’ve prayed to hear your voice again . . . and the reality is so much better than my dreams.”
“I love you, Raven.”
“I’m going to do whatever it takes to prove you’re now safe. That my love for you hasn’t stopped simply because you’ve been gone.”
“People change,” she said softly. “I’m not the woman you once knew.”
“You’re my wife. The woman I promised to love through good times and bad. And if you think I’m just going to turn around and leave, you’re deluding yourself.”
“You have no idea what I’ve been through,” she said bitterly. “Unfortunately, I do,” Dave said sadly.
And there ends the telling of the lives of the Mountain Mercenaries, a group of ex-soldiers brought together by one man’s relentless search for his one true love.
I bawled my eyes out with this one. I cried, knowing that this is the final installment to a series that I have fallen in love with. I cried, knowing that Rex would finally find his Raven.
Susan Stoker has never shied from difficult storylines, and the Mountain Mercenaries, I believe, is one of her heaviest to date.
I have come across fellow readers who have said that they had a hard time starting the first book, Allye and Gray’s story, where Allye, a dancer, was targeted by a human trafficker with a penchant for “acquiring” people with unique abilities.
The author’s descriptions of violence were jarring, yes, but to tone it down would have been a disservice to the light that she wanted to shine on the world of human trafficking. Sex slavery, after all, is still rampant in every corner of the globe. More so now, when people are resorting to any means they can, rightly or wrongly, to cope with a pandemic.
According to the preliminary findings of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) on the Impact of the Covid-19 Pandemic on Trafficking in Persons, “there are fears that COVID-19 is making the task of identifying victims of human trafficking even more difficult.”
“They are also more exposed to contracting the virus, less equipped to prevent it, and have less access to healthcare to ensure their recovery. Essential and practical operations to support them have become a challenge, due to countries adjusting their priorities during the pandemic,” the document said, adding that “dramatic increases in unemployment and reductions in income, especially for low wage and informal sector workers, mean that significant numbers of people who were already vulnerable find themselves in even more precarious circumstances.”
Defending Raven, for me, was bittersweet, evoking a lot of emotions that Susan Stoker seems to have snatched from my very soul. The author, bless her heart, has outdone herself this time, giving justice to the Mountain Mercenaries’ fight against human trafficking.
The story can be read as a standalone, but I would implore you to start with Defending Allye so that you may see and understand why Rex—Dave Justice—decided to set his sights against one of the world’s vilest problems, the trafficking of women, children, and yes, sometimes even men.
I hope that, as you turn the last page of the series, your eyes will have been opened to the plight of those victimized by sex traffickers. Maybe, just maybe, you will be encouraged to do your part in eradicating this scourge.
Remember, Raven could be your Mom, your daughter, sister, cousin, or friend. Or Raven could just as easily … be you.