Robert Bryndza's latest addition to his former police officer, PI Kate Marshall series is absolutely terrific. Kate has 13 years of sobriety under her belt, is missing her son, Jake, now at university in California, runs her private detective agency with her partner, Tristan Harper, who takes a much bigger role in this twisty and complex 2018 case. She lives on the beautiful Thurlow Bay, and part of her everyday routine is waking up in the morning and going for a swim in the sea that sets her up for the day, only this time she fails to notice a deadly riptide. She almost pays with her life for this error, waking up in hospital, learning she had been rescued by 2 surfers, finding herself struggling to process the terror of what happened and its impact on her health, mentally and physically.
Next to her on the hospital ward is Jean Julings, who goes on to relate the traumatic events of 11 years ago, on a camping trip to Dartmoor where her grandson, 3 year old Charlie, went missing, with a search party unable to find him, and it being assumed he fell into the river and drowned. This horror is exacerbated when Jean's daughter, Becky, unable to cope with this and in 2014 commiting suicide. Jean needs closure, she has to know what happened to her beloved grandson, and using her precious savings, hires Kate and Tristan to investigate. Kate makes few allowances for the state of her health, and as a result is laid low as she is forced to rest as she endeavours to come to terms with what she went through. With Tristan having to take a bigger role, the two of them dig deep, including delving into Jean's personal history, going to Dartmoor, looking into the police investigation, and discovering the brutal murder of a social worker, Anna Treadwell, taking place soon after Charlie disappeared.
One of the delights of this crime read is the wonderful sense of location, Dartmoor is a magnificent place of great beauty, but it has its menacing and deadly side, with dangerous bogs that can claim a life so easily, and its folklore, such as that surrounding the Pixie tree. This is a darkly atmospheric, engaging, thrilling and intense read, it is eye opening observing how Kate responds to her near death experience, not that this stops her rebellious side coming to the fore, and which is to prove crucial to her and Tristan solving their cold case. Fans of the author and this series are likely to love this, as will other readers who enjoy the crime and mystery genre. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.