5★
“Confine a dozen scientists and engineers to a seemingly endless desert of hard-packed sand with no recreational diversions and, inevitably, they will design and build a golf course.
. . .
Donald Buchanan and Arthur Friedman played the makeshift course almost every morning while the rest of the men slept. Most of the scientists preferred to work through the chill of the desert night and sleep through the most brutal heat of the day, but Donald and Arthur were paced to a different clock.
‘I have an idea,’ Donald said as he lined up his drive.
‘Jesus Christ, the last time you said that, you and Teller damn near blew up half the world.’ ”
That would be Edward Teller, ‘father’ of the hydrogen bomb. This book has more than one title, one of which refers to Donald’s bright idea, which he explains while the men are playing golf in 1957.
“ ‘So what’s this idea of yours?’
‘A bomb that doesn’t kill anybody.’
‘That defeats the purpose of a bomb, doesn’t it?’ ”
Sixty years later, we meet Lydia, a young woman flying to Minnesota who discovers that her seatmate Chuck’s father worked with her grandfather on a very secret project many years ago. They meet for coffee after they land to compare notes, and Lydia notices a man watching them. She feels what she calls a prickle, a sensation she’s felt before that warns her of danger.
She’s right, of course, and before she can meet him again, Chuck has been murdered. Later, she comes home in a snow storm to make dinner for her neighbour to discover his body in her basement. When the police come, they discover a second body.
Our favourite detectives, Gino Rolseth and Leo Magozzi are trying to imagine what connection there could possibly be between the different victims so turn to the Monkeewrench crew, who begin their surreptitious snooping through the tangled web of the internet.
Grace MacBride and her three friends are extreme hackers – there is little that they and The Beast (their super computer) can’t eventually trace. She doesn’t have Lydia’s prickle sensation, but her wariness is over the top.
“Grace MacBride was getting better. She hadn’t thrown caution to the wind just yet, but sometimes it seemed that she was positioning herself for the windup. She no longer believed—as she had for most of her life—that every single person on the planet was out to kill her, but you had to be an absolute idiot not to realize that probably half of them were. By her count, she’d been up close and personal with at least six people who had actually taken a crack at it.”
She trusts almost nobody, and it has taken a long time for Leo Magozzi to get close to her. The relationships between all the regular characters make this series special. It’s not soap opera, but it has warmth and humour and very real, human closeness.
Leo is a loner who envies his partner Gino’s loving wife (and her cooking!), which makes it hard for him to deal with Grace’s don’t-get-close-to-me attitude. They are now close privately, on her terms, but in public, he still has to be careful, as she’s likely to freeze up if he touches her.
The plot is terrific, as is the sixth idea, and while I figured out a few of the clues (as I’m sure I was intended to), they didn’t lead me to any kind of solution. There are more murders – assassinations is a better word – and nobody is sure who’s on which side. Is this big secret something the US government is working on? The Russians? And if so, which side is trying to stop what?
I think this is my favourite so far in the series. I’m glad I’ve got a couple more to look forward to, especially as this ends on a surprisingly upbeat note.