Much needed time to process what’s happened to Chaz was taken, both by Chaz and the team, but gammas still hunt, Shadow Unit is needed to hunt them, and Chaz strives to do what he can, even as he’s forced to accept a new normal of nothing being normal again. Hafidha Gates and Daphne Worth are drawn together by sorrow and anger at seeing him struggle, striving to prove themselves out of frustration, a frustration shared and expressed in various ways by other members of Shadow Unit. Hafidha and Daphne, on a first name basis at this point, discover they have differing opinions about the mystical beyond science. Daphne Worth has a past, which comes to play in a surprising way against a gamma, surprising a cynical Hafidha. Another case tries Esther Falkner as both an agent and a mother, bringing up some of her fears about Chaz and her own family. In spite of all this change, Daniel Brady has an opportunity of allievating his loneliness, due to a happy accident.
Giving Chaz and the Shadow Unit a chance to think, feel, and grieve about everything which happened in the previous volume while pushing forward struck an earnest balance between the emotions and the professionalism of the characters. The last case the Shadow Unit solved was a gut-wrencher, showcasing a real problem in society, how dangerous peer pressure and body shaming can be, providing a striking contrast to the case before it.
This may have been less intense than the previous volume, yet it was no less rich or deep; beginning with Chaz coping with the aftermath of what happened to him, fragmenting and spreading out to the rest of team, before the Shadow Unit plunged back into the fray. I’ve gotten very attached to these characters and feel all the more attached to them now. Sometimes, I ache for the gamma as much as the gamma’s victims, depending upon the gamma and their mythology.
This is a very addictive series. I’m glad there’s more.