This is the seventh book in Doiron’s crime series featuring Maine game warden Mike Bowditch. (In Maine, game wardens are full law-enforcement officers, with all the powers of state troopers: “They are the ‘off-road police.’”)
Mike, 28, has been a game warden for five years, and has been dating Stacy Stevens. Stacy is a wildlife biologist with the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife. Currently she is up north in Ashland, Maine, studying a dying-off of moose in the state, so Mike is on his own.
A beautiful but crass and manipulative woman, Amber Langstrom, shows up at Mike’s door, asking for his help in finding her son Adam. She claims Adam is the illegitimate son of Mike’s father, and therefore Mike’s half-brother. Mike’s father is dead, but when he was alive, he had been “the most notorious criminal in Maine: a legendary poacher turned cop killer and fugitive.” Mike has been struggling to get out from under the shadow of his dad’s reputation, but can’t resist finding out more about this missing 21-year-old who might in fact be related to him; in addition to everything else, his father was known as a “ladies’ man.”
Mike explains letting himself being talked into looking for Adam by admitting: ‘I have always had a foolhardy streak,” and allowing that he has “a chronic addiction to adrenaline.” But then there is also: just being stupid.
Without any proof from Amber except a photo in which Adam displays eyes remarkably like Mike’s dad’s (but also remarkably like Amber’s), Mike heads up to the area near the [fictional] Widowmaker Ski Resort, where Amber works. Adam has been living nearby there in a halfway house for convicted sex offenders released from jail. Adam served two years for the crime of statutory rape, which Adam’s mother insists was actually consensual sex.
Mike contacts Gary Pulsifer, the district warden for the area, for more information on the case. Mike decides that “everything [Gary] told me about Adam’s character - his cockiness, his fighting temper, his marksmanship with a deer rifle - made me think the missing man really might be my father’s second son.” [Because those characteristics are hereditary? And uniquely so? Really? The author is a really smart guy, and has consistently painted Mike as one too. It seems he wanted to give Mike an “excuse” to think this guy really was his brother, but this stretches credulity….]
In any event, there is much obfuscating by local residents who hate sex offenders; a variety of murders; and Mike’s own life is endangered.
There is also a side plot about a wolf dog that doesn’t have much to do with the rest of it, but actually was more interesting to me than the main plot, and much less irritating for a number of reasons.
Evaluation: This is probably my least favorite of all the Mike Bowditch books, but I like the series, and I love the focus on a Maine game warden that enables readers to learn a great deal of background about Maine wildlife. I’ll be hoping for better things with the next book!