Oh my goodness! I've only just finished this book and I am done. Spent. Still reeling from that ending! Before I go on though, I will just mention that, although the main story is self contained, please do take some time to really get to know Heck et al and go back and start from book one and play catch-up. He is a bit of a complex character and some of what motivates and drives him, although touched on briefly here, does maybe need a bit more explanation to really get to know the real Detective Mark Heckenburg of the NCA SCU.
Reflecting what is going on in the real world, there are rumours of cuts to the Force and, as our story begins, it becomes apparent that the future of the SCU is threatened. To try and ride the tide, the SCU teams up with the Cold Case squad choosing 20 of the most evil fugitives to track down and bring to justice in the very aptly named Operation Sledgehammer. As they are to be working in twos, Heck is paired up with old "friend" Gail Honeyford. The two of them tasked with finding Eddie Creeley, a nasty man indeed, his crimes having escalated so much that he was even rejected by his own criminal peers, going to ground for several years already. But it soon becomes apparent that this new combined task force aren't the only ones searching for both Creeley and the others on the hit list and things start to go a bit south for all involved.
Once I started this book, once I reconnected with Heck, it soon became apparent that I was going nowhere, doing nothing, until I got to the end of the book. All the things I know and love about Heck were present in this latest episode. His complicated relationship with Gemma now has an additional facet with the addition of a new DI, threatening not only their on-off personal dalliance but also Heck's professional standing in her eyes. But, aside from that, Heck is the same maverick, gut following, corner taking, oblivious to risk, Heck that I have grown to really admire since book one and throughout this series. Bulldozing his way into things without really thinking through all the consequences, his ends being the only ones that matter and hang the rest of them. Whether he really would survive in real life work doing what he does, well, I'm not sure about that but, for the purpose of fiction, why not!? He continues to see things that others fail to notice, holds on to ideas that others dismiss, a bit like a dog with a bone at times but, and this is important, his heart is in the right place even if his lines are a bit blurred at times.
The plot contained within the book is a bit complex at times; there's a lot going on throughout. Most of which is very hard hitting and at times quite hard to read about as there are some very dark themes that run throughout the book. There are scenes and characters that, on introduction, don't appear to fit in with the rest of what is happening but, knowing this author as I do, I know they will eventually so the key for me was to just sit with them, remember them, and know that eventually the bigger picture will all come together. And it does, with explosive consequences!
I need to talk about the ending but, at the same time, I don't want to. If I don't talk about it I can pretend it didn't happen, right? Obviously I can't talk about it here even if I wanted to (spoilers) but suffice to say, even though I am not a fan of that kind of ending at all, it didn't annoy me in the slightest. Leaving things as the author did doesn't make me yearn for the next book any more that I was always going to, this being a series I already love.
The way things were left at the end does however pose the question of what next for Heck? How does he move on from this? Well, hopefully I won't have to wait too long to find out. My thanks go to the Publisher and Netgalley for the chance to read this book.