"One good thing about being a kid: You could pretend to be a dunce and no one batted an eye."
—Behind the Curtain, P. 58
Freelance eighth-grade detective Ingrid Levin-Hill is back in Behind the Curtain, just a few weeks or months following her near-death encounter with a psychopath when she discovered the identity of Cracked-Up Katie's killer in Down the Rabbit Hole. Ingrid's successful foray into sleuthing, albeit against the wishes of Chief Gilbert L. Strade of the Echo Falls police force, has earned her some clout around town, though only in modest measure. To her friends, enemies, and her antagonistic math teacher, Ms. Groome, Ingrid is no different than before she brought a taste of Sherlock Holmes to her Connecticut hometown.
There were several story threads left unresolved in Down the Rabbit Hole, and they pick up without delay at the start of Behind the Curtain. Ingrid's father's father, Grampy, remains in the middle of a real-estate dispute with the Ferrand Group, a development corporation headed by well-to-do Tim Ferrand, who employs Ingrid's father. Grampy is no more seriously considering selling his land to the Ferrands than in the previous book, but a few extra legal difficulties have popped up that need to be dealt with if he wants to retain his land holdings. At the same time, Ingrid's older brother, Ty, whose behavior in Down the Rabbit Hole strongly suggested he was using performance enhancing drugs to better his play on the football field, is looking more musclebound than ever, and his mood isn't any cheerier for it. Ty carries a physical intimidation factor now, mostly because of the way he flies off the handle at even mild provocation, and he isn't afraid to use that intimidation against Ingrid. A longtime literary student of the legendary Sherlock Holmes and his detecting methods, Ingrid starts keeping a sharp eye out for evidence to confirm her suspicions about Ty, and the evidence isn't hard to find. When Ingrid follows the trail of clues, she learns Ty isn't the only individual involved with PEDs in Echo Falls. A few local unsavories are in this up to their necks, but if they go down for trafficking illegal drugs, Ty goes down, too. Ingrid knows her brother has gotten into serious trouble this time, and even her super-sleuth logic might not be enough to find a way out for him.
But the configuration of the mystery as Ingrid perceives it goes topsy-turvy in an instant when Ingrid, on her way to an interscholastic math competition she nearly slept through early on a Saturday morning, is grabbed from behind in her family's garage, rendered unconscious, and abducted in the trunk of someone's car. By calm, quick thinking, and the aid of adrenaline pumping through her veins with the fear of what could happen if the kidnapper gets her to their planned destination, Ingrid frees herself from the trunk without the perpetrator even knowing, and makes her way to safety. Ingrid's troubles are far from over, however, following her escape from the clutches of her mystery assailant. There isn't any physical evidence to corroborate Ingrid's abduction claim, and Ms. Groome is sure Ingrid would have done anything to get out of representing her school for MathFest. Chief Strade, who likely wouldn't have solved the Cracked-Up Katie murder without Ingrid's whiz-kid intervention, and whose son Joey is something close to being Ingrid's boyfriend, has nothing to go on in defense of his young star gumshoe. Doubts abound regarding Ingrid's integrity, and even her parents have a hard time believing Ingrid isn't either lying about the abduction, or thinks her own fabricated narrative to be true because she's suffering Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder from her unsettling closeness to the Cracked-Up Katie homicide. The only way Ingrid is going to show everyone that she isn't a liar or worse is to prove who kidnapped her, and that isn't as straightforward as she would like. The only people with obvious reason to take a chance on committing a federal crime to silence Ingrid are Ty's steroid contacts, perhaps spooked by how close Ingrid has come to unraveling their dirty little operation, and Ingrid knows if she exposes them, Ty will hang for his own PED crimes. The only way out of this mess is to pin the offense on the drug traffickers without involving Ty, and Ingrid may have just the idea to make that happen.
Peter Abrahams has remarkably improved his storytelling for kids with this second Echo Falls mystery, in my opinion. The plot is deeper and more complex, the ethical puzzles more stimulating and challenging to reason through, and Ingrid faces self-doubts along the way as any eighth-grader is certain to, even if she is a junior detective of moderate local renown. When Ingrid quietly confronts her brother with what she knows of the corners he has cut to improve his athletic strength, he fires back with stinging insinuations that Ingrid has grown full of herself since solving the Cracked-Up Katie head-scratcher, and sees mysteries and wrongdoing wherever she goes because she's desperate to perpetuate the glory of her day in the sun. Ingrid categorically pushes back against Ty's counter-accusations, but privately wonders if he's right. Might Ingrid be overly suspicious of everyone around her, including her own brother, because she desires the rush of finding the next clue when the trail has all but died out, relentlessly pursuing her quarry until the climactic moment of apprehension? Ty is far from Ingrid's primary intellectual opponent, of course. When nearly everyone she knows believes that Ingrid's story of being snatched from her garage is a crazy coverup for her decision to skip MathFest, a doctor by the name of Vishevsky points out that Ingrid is an aspiring stage actor, and suggests a connection between Ingrid's kidnapping claim and the tendency of more than a few Hollywood starlets to have a hard time connecting with reality away from the big screen. "(A)ll these actresses and actors, had difficulty expressing their feelings in real life. It was only in the world of make-believe that their feelings came out." An astute point by Dr. Vishevsky, perhaps, but Ingrid knows she's telling the truth, and is determined to root out the criminals before anything more can go wrong. But is she one hundred percent right in what she believes happened, and why? Or might there be a hidden enemy to contend with, one far closer to Ingrid than she realizes? Will the Sherlock (or Enola) Holmes of Echo Falls establish an undeniable pattern of effective detective work by snaring another violent criminal, or are her days of clever suspect-tracking about to be permanently ended?
There's a lot of good stuff in this book, enough that I'm going to give it two and a half stars, and hesitated several hours before rounding that rating down to two instead of up to three. Peter Abrahams's writing is sleek and surprising, the language at turns bouncy, beautiful and illuminating, and interesting characters are plentiful. The sweetness of Ingrid's halting, unsure relationship with Joey Strade is back, as rewarding as it felt in Down the Rabbit Hole, and promises more to come in the third book of the series. As in Down the Rabbit Hole, there are questions left unanswered at the conclusion of Behind the Curtain, but they aren't as noticeable this time. Readers of any age will enjoy Ingrid Levin-Hill's second mystery story, and I recommend it. Look out, world, for coming up after this is the third (and final?) Echo Falls novel, Into the Dark. Like many other readers, I suspect, I can hardly wait to find out what happens next.