Reed Farrel Colemann is the second writer to take over the Jesse Stone Series since Robert B Parker’s death in 2010. Parker had published nine Jesse Stone books and Michael Brandman added another three, many not well received. In picking up the series, Coleman has chosen to keep Parker’s distinct short chapters and snappy dialogue but place his own distinctive stamp on the work by continuing to develop the characters. This is the first of his Jesse Stone books and I for one am pleased he has taken it on, breathing new life into a character and a series that has many fans.
This story reaches into Jesse’s past to pick up on a time that is often the focus of his ruminations. It is the time he played shortstop for the Albuquerque Dukes, the Dodgers Triple A Club. He had dreams of entering the big leagues until he was felled by a career ending injury. It happened during a double play, when a ball thrown by his teammate Vic Prado and a runner’s hard slide into second base resulted in a collision that took out Jesse’s shoulder and ended his dream. Vic went on to reach the big leagues and become an All Star, taking with him Jesse’s beautiful girlfriend Kayla who he married. Vic has done well for himself and is now a wealthy venture capitalist living the high-life. But he is also mixed up with childhood friends who are part of the seamy side of the financial world. Things are about to fall apart unless he moves quickly. Vic organized the reunion as a way to reconnect with Jesse and get his help enacting a plan to extricate himself from his troubles.
Jesse never felt close to Vic although they were roommates. He is not even keen to attend the reunion, although the all-expenses paid trip to New York promises superior accommodations and good food. But he has decided to go for old times sake, in hopes the reunion finally helps him close the door on this chapter of his life.
When he arrives in New York, he finds it is not just Vic who wants to get him away from the others to talk. Kayla has also approached him for some quiet time away from the ears of others. She has even introduced Jesse to her friend Dee Harrington, a beautiful woman who she knows will hold Jesse’s attention until she can get to him. Jesse is immediately attracted to Dee but things are just getting started when he is called back to home to investigate a murder.
As Jesse makes his way back to Paradise, he is mulling over some disturbing information he picked up at the reunion -- that his career destroying injury was not an accident but was intentional. The thought sends him spiraling into a series of “what ifs” that brings to the surface demons he has been fighting for years, demons that continually remind him how his dream of a baseball career crashed and burned.
Back in Paradise Jesse begins the investigation into the death of Martina Penworth, an eighteen year old student at Tufts who was found with two bullets in her body in the old Salter mansion. Her boyfriend Benjamin Salter, the youngest son of wealthy Harlan Salter IV, is the natural suspect and is missing, although his car is still parked outside. It is not long before Jesse and his team realize that Ben has been kidnapped.
Vic Prado has been running a successful Ponzi-like scheme for years and had attempted to take over one of Harlan Salter’s mutual funds. He had made Salter an offer, but Salter, furious at Prado’s bold, cocky and arrogant manner refused. Prado in turn applied pressure to get his way and further infuriated Slater, who enlisted lawyer Monty Bernstein to help him exact his revenge for Prado’s presumptuous ways. As Stone’s investigates the case, it becomes clear that Ben Salter’s kidnapping and the murder of the young girl are both connected to Vic Prado. The entire scenario provides Coleman with the opportunity to introduce a very scary hitman known as Mr. Peepers and to leave a clever hook that will lure readers to his next book.
Parker’s writing was notably spare, whereas Coleman’s takes more time to tell his story, includes more dialogue and fully fleshes out his characters in the process. Coleman writes more about Jesse’s drinking, the demon who threatens to take over his life. As a writer, Coleman is better able to describe the pull of alcohol and the rituals that Jesse and other alcoholics use before and while they drink, not just the brooding self- reflection and the lies they tell themselves.
Coleman also lets his story unfold from many voices, giving us a number of points of view. Including his characters in the telling of his story helps readers better understand their motivations and their behavior. It makes for a much more complex and nuanced story of a crime and the people who are part of it.
Coleman also shows us a side of Jesse we seldom see, the more brutal side of Jesse we know is there. Jesse is not an emotional man, he keeps that side of himself hidden from others, but it is there, especially when he sees behavior he deems absolutely unacceptable. In this case, Jesse exacts a brutal beating on a scumbag of a man who is abusing a woman has her living in fear.
Coleman’s plot is complex with more characters than we usually see in a Parker novel. But he does not overload it, skillfully maintaining the intensity and the tension until he brings the story to a chilling conclusion.
And in a humorous aside, I’d like to award Coleman additional points for losing the cat Mildred who never fit in with Jesse’s persona. Everyone knows he is not or ever could be, a “cat kind-of-guy”.
Thanks Mr. Coleman for a complex story and a great read. We’ve been waiting for you.