I found this book on goodreads some two years ago, and finally found the time to read it. It is the second mystery in the Psalm 23 mystery series. Since I did not read the first book in the series, I can only assume, from references made throughout this book, that it was about a serial killer that Cindy, a receptionist/secretary at a local church had become romantically involved with during the Easter season. Now that we have that minor tidbit out of the way, let’s move on to ‘I Shall Not Want.’
It is now the Thanksgiving season, and Joseph Tyler, a wealthy businessman and member of the church Cindy works for has organized a new charity. Although there has not been a great deal of research in the area, Joseph is hoping that providing homeless people with dogs from a local rescue shelter as well as providing lifetime dog food and veterinary care, that the love provided by the animal would help lift the homeless out of their present life style. It seems like a good plan, even though it is to take place the Friday before Thanksgiving; as if there was not already too many things to do. Joseph has even donated one of his precious litter puppies, worth a fortune to the lucky recipient if they so chose to sell the animal rather than keep it.
Protestors against the program are streaming in front of Joseph’s mansion, one even jumps in front of Cindy’s car as she arrived, shaking her to the core. Calming herself as much as possible, Cindy reports to Joseph to learn what she can do to help. Having been unable to reach his personal assistant after numerous tries, Joseph sends Cindy in to find Derek and retrieve the puppy he will be donating. Instead of the easy task Cindy assumed she had been sent on, she finds Derek’s body and the puppy is missing. Is this an Easter replay?
Cindy attends a scheduled speed dating session, hoping to put the crises from her mind, instead, the worse begins to happen; those who adopted the dogs, including members of the press and on lookers to the new charity are beginning to disappear, their bodies turning up in awkward places and their dogs missing. Although warned against her involvement, Cindy cannot help thinking she knows something her conscious mind cannot grasp and she realizes just how true it is when she sees one of the dogs given away at the charity event frantically clawing at a recycler. Investigating, Cindy finds a bloody hand, this time attached to a live body. Can what the homeless man tells the police in Cindy’s presence help her grasp the piece of information bouncing through her brain before anyone else gets hurt, or will she find herself once again in the grip of a serial killer?