The body of seventeen-year-old Scott Theriault is discovered floating in a stream days after he ran away from a behavior-modification facility/school for bad boys. Scott’s father is convinced his son’s death was no accident and PI Charlie Parker knows the pain of losing a child. Parker, our soft-charging protagonist, had a daughter, Jennifer, murdered twenty years earlier. The gruesome event was formative in this long running series, and Parker is naturally drawn to cases involving children.
In a parallel plot we learn of a group of men who play what they call, ‘The Game’’, an amusement which includes the kidnap, rape and murder an out-of-state woman at random. We are offered a bit of their sick background, how there used to be four in this Game, but rules were broken and a player was eliminated by the others. Now two of the men worry a third might have murdered off schedule and have jeopardized their safety. Also, a young woman named Mallory Norton recently disappeared and the reader is left to assume she might be connected to the twisted Game and the missing boy, Scott Theriault.
The real-world setup is done well and our bad guys are drawn with fierce authenticity, but this is a Charlie Parker novel, so supernatural elements are also at play. Charlie’s dead daughter has loosely guided her father for years, but she has never, before now, appeared to Angel and Louis, Charlie’s closest friends and associates. Angel see Jennifer's spirit waiting for him by a lake and just to raise the stakes a bit more, Louis discovers he has a contract out on his life, possibly a chit called in from beyond the grave.
If this seems like a lot for an opening, don’t worry, Connolly hybridizes the hard boiled detective genre with a strong hand at the tiller. Once the plot takes off it becomes a masterful police procedural. The author clearly became an expert on how federal agents use high tech methodology to solve crime.
This will satisfy fans of the series or any lovers of Maine. I would have liked to see a few more curve balls in the finale but the ending closes most of the loops opened in the gripping first half of the novel.
Thanks to NetGalley and Atria/Emily Bestler Books for a review copy.