Thank you to Library Thing and Jodé Millman for allowing me to read The Empty Kayak, the third installment in Millman's Queen City Crimes series. I've read the other two, so was familiar with the characters and plots from the previous two novels. There is probably more backstory than needed for a new reader to follow this storyline. Nevertheless, I believe this book is the best of the three.
The author did a great job of conveying a sense of place. The series is set in Poughkeepsie, New York, along the Hudson River. Because this story involved a drowning in the Hudson, there was a lot more opportunity to develop the setting, and the river as a character.
Like the other two books, POV alternates between defense lawyer Jessie Martin and her best friend from grade school, detective Ebony Jones. Their relationship has been strained over the last decade because their professions often pit them against each other, and because they both withhold critical information from each other, they make things a lot harder than they could be.
The previous two books showed more of Jessie, whereas this one focused more on Ebony. And I found I liked Ebony better; Jessie seemed too whiny and devious. Fortunately, the two women learn to work together better in this book.
The story opens when Ebony and her partner, Zander, respond to a boating accident on the Hudson. Social media influencer Olivia Vargas, picnicking with her family, is beside herself because her fiance disappeared while kayaking when a rogue storm blew up. Ebony recognizes a child with the family as Lily, Jessie's daughter, and she soon learns the missing man is Kyle Emory, Jessie's ex-boyfriend and Lily's father. Neither Jessie nor Kyle's parents knew about his engagement to Olivia.
This was a good mystery. Although there wasn't much doubt about "whodunnit" and why, the author did a good job of showing how the detectives, D.A., and Jessie went about uncovering the clues and proving that Kyle's death was no accident.