It was great to be reading another China Bayles mystery after a very, very long time. This one took place in and around Utopia, TX, where China was headed for Thanksgiving with her mother Leatha and her husband Sam at their Bittersweet Nature Sanctuary. On Wednesday, she and daughter, Caitie, were driving from Pecan Springs in Big Red Mama with a load of plants to expand the herb garden at Jennie's Kitchen, just outside Utopia. McQuaid was picking up Brian from college to join them Thanksgiving day. An advance call from Leatha announced that Sam had had a heart attack, surgery, and was hospitalized, but that she, and he in particular, wanted everyone to still have Thanksgiving together. Leatha also had bumped into and invited Mackenzie Chambers, their local and relatively new game warden who previously had served China's county.
So, a lot of the plot revolves around Mackenzie getting the lie of the land and the people near Utopia. I appreciated reading the incredible amount of enlightening information about deer breeding and the reasons for doing so; laws and regulations about native wild deer versus biologically engineered big, meaty game deer with huge racks of antlers; the virtues of a wild hunt without electronic gizmos and surveillance versus big-dollar containment hunts for bloodthirsty trophy hunters; and the extremely profitability of genetically engineered game. On an investigation of several dead deer found by a fellow Mack had dated a few times but was unsure about romantically, she had to call in the Doc Masters, the local veterinarian known for his crustiness. Being a female game warden in Texas she already was battling acceptance, but Doc surprisingly took to Mack. He confidentially told her about something legally questionable he had seen recently on a call, having to do with possibly stolen deer. Since it was her job to investigate, she urged him to tell her where they were located, but he hesitated for non-specific reasons. Mack told him to think it over Thanksgiving day and she would call him first thing Friday morning and expected the details. But by Friday morning, Doc had been murdered in his veterinarian office.
There are multiple underlying side plots and dramas, many of which join together in solving Doc Masters' murder, and of which China ably connects bits and pieces until sense is revealed. And, as always, I thoroughly appreciate and enjoy Albert's included information about plants and their qualities and properties.