In this 8th outing for Amos Walker, Downriver finds the Detroit-based PI involved in a decades old murder/arson case that also involved an armored car robbery. It’s a case that will insert him into one of the city’s big time manufacturers that services the auto industry.
It all starts with Walker picking up Richard DeVries as he’s released from prison after serving 20 years for a crime he says he didn’t commit. Walker is doing the picking up because DeVries wants to hire him to find the real person behind the armored car hold-up that he did the time for. DeVries wants the 2 hundred grand that was taken as compensation for his incarceration.
It doesn’t take long for the action to start when trouble finds them in the form of a short, sharp car chase. The result is an unwanted dip in Lake Superior and a car in serious need of repairs. Clearly, someone found out that DeVries was out of prison.
Once they have dried themselves out and sorted things with the police the hunt for the real person responsible for the 20 year old crime really begins. And so begins the PI equivalent of a cold case investigation which starts off slowly with a combination of theoretical guesswork and good deductive reasoning. His work thrusts him up against some of the high-powered figures in the automotive industry and a well-disguised twist to keep us guessing.
At times, there is a real feeling that Loren is simply amusing himself…and we’re the beneficiaries:
“It had been a long day. I was too hungry to skip supper and too tired to talk to a waitress. I tracked down two minute steaks that were starting to curl in the refrigerator and grilled them for fifteen seconds on each side, apprehended some okra that had been hiding in a can in the cupboard, and released the works into my custody. Detecting is a hard habit to break, even at home. I interrogated a bottle of beer and turned on the TV”
This is a story that builds nicely, helped along by the entertaining first person narrative of Amos Walker whose pithy delivery consistently offers an amusing, if off-beat, view on the world. Once again, though, we are treated to a good, solid hard-boiled detective story with a protagonist who has become adept at working with and around the local police. It’s fast-paced, gritty stuff that is largely about the plot rather than any bothersome character development.
The story recalls the Detroit riot of 1967 because it was during this bloody insurrection that DeVries threw the Molotov cocktail that led to his arrest. It represents a smooth blending of Estleman’s fictional story with some of the history of the city.