This was a good story but in terms of personal preference, it was a bit too dark for my taste. If you're looking for a fun murder mystery, this is not the book for you. But it was well written, well developed, and has an overarching story that I believe will carry on to the next books.
The story is about a homicide detective in Sydney named Harry Belltree. He had served in Afghanistan (where he officially was dead for 18 minutes) but now is in the police force. He is the son of a famous judge whose car ran off the road three years ago, killing both Harry's parents and blinding his wife Jenny, who was in the back seat. The police determined it was an accident but Harry was confident it was intentional and his parents had been murdered.
A couple of deaths (one being his own brother-in-law, Greg Marsh) and other odd things get the attention of Kelly Pool, a journalist. She starts investigating and tries talking to Harry. He dismisses her but can't stop thinking about some of the things she said and things he's found. His wife was a wiz with computers and now with voice activation she is fairly competent again. With her help they find the name of a man (Kristich) threatening to ruin Greg's business and also linked to other crimes. Kristich appears to be a financier but a dirty one who has allegedly stolen from his clients. Harry has Jenny provide access codes and wipe CCTV footage so he can break into the man's office. But Kristich surprises him (turns out he's living in his office) and his thug also shows up. They are threatening Harry and Harry manages to have the weapons each were holding turned on each other, instead of Harry, killing them both. Harry cleans the scene of his presence, grabs some files and an external hard drive and leaves.
Jenny doesn't seem at all phased her husband just killed two people and 'happily' goes through hard drive, accumulating more and more evidence and names. But all were in a code that they had to figure out.
For the record, this is the point of the story that I realized I was most definitely not reading a light-hearted mystery and I wasn't sure if I wanted to continue. Mainly because I couldn't (and still can't) get a read on Harry. I don't think he's a 'bad guy' but he obviously has no ethical issues with taking the law and justice into his own hands. And time and again throughout the story, he appears to boldly confront his person(s) of interest and then has to scramble to cover his tracks when things go sideways. He seems to inadvertently put people in harm's way, which later he feels tremendous remorse over, yet fails to have seen the risk in the first place. I found him to be a meticulous yet careless character who put solving his parents murder over everything else, including his job and the lives of those around him. It made it hard for me to like him and understand his decisions.
Realizing he needs more help, he starts working with Kelly Pool. He feeds her information he got from the external drive, she publishes it, and when people start reacting he is there to pressure them. But these are powerful people. Not only was Kristich, the financier, involved, but they find evidence of a major property developer (Mansur), councilor (Potgeiter), gov't official (Oldfield), a biker gang called the Crows, and most likely someone from the police force involved. Kelly's house is broken into and her roommate brutally beaten, as they must have assumed the roommate was her. (yet Kelly does nothing to increase her safety). Kelly realizes many of these men were traveling out of the country but she doesn't know why. And then talking to one of her sources, the old woman mentions children and things start to click.
Meanwhile Harry has finally learned the head of the Crows biker gang was the one who ran his parents off the road, so he shows up at a biker meeting and shoots one of the gang and chases the other guy down where he finally shoots and kills him. Learning that his brother-in-law was tied up in the deaths. And again Harry wipes the scene and feigns ignorance when he's called to investigate it.
Greg's widow, Jenny's sister Nicole, was going to be financially ruined (until Harry killed Kristich, the man who legally controlled all their property) and Jenny found money Kirstich had squirreled away to others and planned to steal it back and transfer it to her sister. (I mean, I get it. Very Robin Hood kind of thing going on, but again makes me question Harry and Jenny's ethics. I find it hard to support their actions).
Kelly was interviewing a woman in Crucifixion Creek (this is the property area where all these murders and crimes are taking place) on the street where the biker gang had taken over. She was noticing the way all the row houses have the same blinds in the top windows. As she was drinking the coffee the woman had brought her, she passed out. She was drugged.
Kelly found herself with councilor, Potgeiter. He spends the day beating her and raping her then harnesses her up and leaves her hanging in a mine shaft overnight. People realize she's missing but no one really seems to do anything about it. Harry finally connects a couple more dots and drives out to Potgeiter's place. He breaks in and finds evidence that Kelly was there, overpowers Potgeiter, threatens him, destroys his testicle, and finally learns where Kelly is. They pull her up and Harry throws Potgeiter down the mine shaft. He leaves Kelly to call for help telling her that no one can know he was there.
Then he heads over to the man who took over his brother-in-law's business. Jenny had figured out he had been in on everything and Harry finds him digging up the bodies of children. He restrains him and calls his team in but heads to Minister Oldfield's house. Tells him he knows everything about the trips to India and the child sex slavery trade he was involved in. Harry leaves a gun on the table and when Harry goes to answer the door to the police, Oldfield kills himself.
Somehow all this had to do with Harry's father. Presumably, he had also discovered what was happening and so they killed him. Somehow Harry also manages to avoid being tied to any of these killings or events, though his partner Deb does seem suspicious. Then Harry is called by Inspector Toby Wagstaff to meet him later. He starts questioned Harry on what he's learned about his parent's murder, and Harry says he's still going to keep looking to find out why they were murdered and if anyone else is involved. And that's when Toby shoots him, but before he can leave Harry handcuffs his ankle to him. And when a patrol car shows up not long after they shoot and kill Toby.
Meanwhile Jenny had a Dr appointment, someone knocked her over while crossing the street but she made it across. Got some news (she's pregnant, I'm sure) and then of course she has to go to the hospital cause Harry has been shot and killed. But she tells Deb that it took longer this time, that Harry was dead for 38 minutes this time.
So obviously the story is going to continue, Harry is going to live, but it's such a dark and kind of nasty story that I'm not sure I want to read anymore. Even if it is just a trilogy. But if you like this kind of story, then I recommend this book.