So, this book starts with a bank heist, where our protagonist sees fellow officers gunned down and injured. Wanting a safer job she joins the FBI. Then we get a chapter from the killers perspective, creepy and eerie, and honestly engaging. Then chapter 3 we are at another bank robbery years later, our protagonist clears things up and gets a call The Dead Eyes Killer has struck again. Did we really need two prologues? Start with the killer as prologue, and jump into the second bank heist gone wrong.
Then as the story gets going we find out protagonist might be a little mentally warped or drained, as she is having dreams of herself as the killer.
The killer’s sections elude to the perp being a child, locking himself in a secret room as his abusive father beats on hookers. Then hints that maybe the killer is a grown man, which would fit our profiler’s assumptions about him.
Each of these killer chapters slowly peel back the layers of who this mystery killer is. It is actually the only thing that kept me engaged with the novel. It creates wonderful mystery, and as things are revealed about him, suspense. I went from thinking it was the protagonist’s boss, to the professional colleague she had snubbed at the academy, to her abusive ex-husband and even her abused son. I finally settled pretty early on though that it must be her boyfriend, a rough past with parents, right age, I think the race was off according to her profile but I would be okay with her not being 100% perfect on that.
Ultimately, though it’s the lost twin sister of our protagonist and the twin has DID (dissociative identity disorder, or multiple personalities) and that is why the protagonist had strange dreams and feelings on knowing the killer or being the killer. Even though she didn’t know she was a twin!
Let’s retrace here a bit. Karen gets put on the Dead Eyes case, as she is the best there is at what she does. Profiling killers. In the end her whole profile is wrong and instead of admitting it she says “technically, the profile is right because she WAS a 32 year old man when her identity slipped. WHAT?!?
Next, she deals with her abusive husband, but in all the wrong ways. I liked this actually. I saw how it was going to go, how it was going to create greater conflict for her and her son. Basically, hubby tricks her into assaulting him, so that she can’t call a lawyer to have custody revisited by a judge. Then this makes her get taken off the Dead Eyes case. All decent ways to show this character’s life and create struggles for her. Her son is taken to the husband who promptly beats him and throws him down the stairs putting her son in a coma.
How is this a good idea? Am I supposed to care about a stupid serial killer when my point of view character almost loses her son? I didn’t. However, even with her son in a coma she is leaving the hospital and investigating dead eyes killer when NO MOTHER WORTH HER SALT WOULD LEAVER HER TEENAGE SON ON HIS DEATH BED! Doctors told her he had a chance but it wasn’t likely he would recover. Guess she should just get back to work and flirt with her younger protégé.
Then she goes to stay with her mother with dementia while her son is in the hospital. Idr if there was mention of a nurse being around for her mom or if she lives alone, but I’m pretty sure the way it reads is our protagonist lets her mom stay in her childhood home by herself slowly losing her mind. Ik it was a bit of a drive from where she lived and worked and where her son was hospitalized. But she needed to go there in order to find out she was actually displaced as a baby. Her mother is not her mother but her aunt. A secret aunt that our protagonist never met or knew about.
Fun… what the hell does that have to do with our killer? Oh, we are still getting chapters and sections from the killer throughout all this, she never stops looking for the killer. But it seems like there is plenty on her plate.
Well without telling us how she does it, our protagonist shows up at her real mother’s doorstep. Shockingly, it is the governor or some political personality that we had some insight on previously. Her mother is the same person who had hired her old arch enemy from the FBI Academy as a body guard and made the locals and the FBI let him in on the Dead Eyes case at the start in chapter 3. Coincidence? GOD, I HOPE NOT! Then the same night our protagonist confronts her senator mother or whatever her mom rejects her before being murdered by Dead Eyes. Suspicions fall on our protagonist now from the arch enemy and other members of her team.
Well then they slowly discover Dead Eyes is her long lost biological father. That is why Dead Eyes killed the senator. All the victims look like her too, but she is out of the age gap of the typical victim pool. So it stands that dead eyes modeled his victims after the senator. Okay, I can buy that I suppose, but the rest of it is just poor character and poor action. It happens to our protagonist and not because our protagonist makes something happen. She is literally wrong at nearly every turn. Yet, all her team and superiors say, she is the best of the best. 🙄
To shorten it up, they find dear old dad with his brains blown out and go, “yup! Definitely a suicide. Good police work everybody.” Turns out another victim is taken. Wasn’t dad! An injured Karen can’t go to the scene but her boyfriend/protégé can. Then she is taken when boy-toy leaves, and we cycle back and forth between boy-toy and Karen.
I really locked in on this. I really enjoyed the pace of this ending. Despite her being a shite mother, and mediocre detective special agent or whatever, I was ready for the epic ending to unfold. I mean, it started to make sense. She was assigned dead eyes, then her son go for a spill, and ex-husband goes on the run. Her protégé becomes her boy friend and goes to her mother’s telling her she needs to get away. They discover a secret about Karen even she didn’t know, then (although it was sudden) real mom is dead, two people that could possibly kill her knowing she is Karen’s mom is therefore Karen and boy-toy.
“What if he knew before they found out her mother was the senator?” I thought. “What if he is her brother?” I wondered. “What if he pushed all the seemingly random pieces of this puzzle together and cunningly evaded detection right under the noses of his colleagues and the FBI?” I desperately thought as Karen revealed the killer to be… a fucking sister she had no idea existed and for whatever reason ended up with their abusive father instead of with Karen and their aunt causing her to develop DID and become a woman serial killer which is rare.
No silence of the lambs misdirect ending here! Just plain ole unrealistic and unrelatable characters, plots where the driving force isn’t action from our protagonist, but random occurrences that happen due to our antagonist’s actions.
The best possible ending was right there, boyfriend is brother, brother is serial killer. He should have known it all along. He was behind all her recent misfortunes even pushing her son down the stairs and putting him in a coma and possibly killing her ex-husband, allowing him to take the blame for his injuries. He lured her over to her mother’s and had her dementia riddle mom spill it. He followed her to the real mother’s house and killed her setting up her bodyguard lover as the main killer, if only to lure everyone off his scent, then allows dear ole dad to be found face blown off and pushes suicide. Then another body turns up, killer takes an injured Karen captive, goes to the scene and misdirects an accomplice who is again the arch enemy who was sleeping with Karen’s senator mother and then final battle and everything makes sense. Nope, just random. That’s it. Everything is random.
Two stars because the content, and writing style/voice was halfway decent, but the substance was just abismal.