After his brilliant best selling Detective Erika Foster series, Robert Bryndza has embarked on a new series featuring Kate Marshall. In 1995, Kate was a young DC who caught the Nine Elms Killer, Peter Conway, in traumatic circumstances when he tried to make her his fifth victim. However, instead of being lauded for her efforts, she left the police in disgrace, her reputation in tatters with the intense media focus, she had made an error of judgement by sleeping with Conway, and ending up pregnant with his son. 15 years later, Kate is now a popular criminology lecturer with a bright and gifted research assistant, Tristan Harper, at Ashdean University on the south coast. She still carries the physical and emotional scars of the past, whilst trying to remain sober, attending AA meetings so that she can be the best mother possible. Her 14 year old son, Jake, has been brought up by her parents, with Kate being unable to cope in the past. She is now in a better place, having got over Jake being Peter's son, and built a stronger relationship with him.
However, the past rears its ugly head when Kate is contacted by the distraught Malcolm and Sheila Murray, whose young daughter, Caitlyn, disappeared years ago in Manchester. They are convinced she was another victim of Conway, but the police have given up on investigating, and they want Kate to find out what happened. Kate feels their pain and agrees to look into Caitlyn's disappearance with the help of Tristan. Additionally, there is a disturbed, obsessed and deranged super fan of Conway, replicating the brutally gruesome original murders of young girls. With enormous resources at hand, the present day serial killer will do anything for Conway and it is no coincidence that he is operating in the area around where Kate now lives, she is once again to find herself in deadly danger. In a narrative where Kate gets to dust off her old investigative skills, she tentatively begins to operate and establish herself as a private investigator with Tristan as her assistant.
It took me a little while to become fully immersed in this novel, part of the reason for this is that Bryndza was doing the groundwork in establishing the series with its new emotionally and psychologically damaged Kate, the mother of a son with a serial killer for a father. However, once I got hooked, I just raced through the tense and dark storyline, packed with suspense. Kate is a great protagonist, her character is skilfully developed by the author, and whilst we learn little of Tristan, something I am sure will be rectified later, what I did get to know, I really liked. The young teenage Jake is undoubtedly going to want to know more about his father, perhaps even want to develop a closer relationship with Peter in the future. This turned out to be a wonderful direction for Bryndza to take, this new series is thrilling and exciting, which has me looking forward the sequel. Many thanks to Little, Brown for an ARC.