As the title suggests, a great deal of this fifth installment of the Rockton series, just like the fourth, is out there in the vast boreal forest of Canada's Yukon Territory, and in the snow of December no less, but our intrepid trio is scarcely alone most of the time. First-person narrator and homicide detective Casey Butler, her husband sheriff Eric Dalton, and their year-old Newfoundland still-a-puppy-at-heart are on a dual mission to find a murderer and to find the parents of the month-old baby who was cradled in the murder victim's arms.
It's the baby girl, I guess, who fits the title. Not only did the murderer leave her alive and alone out there in the forest, but she's a winter baby. The denizens of the forest, and we meet many of them, agree that their kind of life rules out raising a child through the first months of its life during the harsh Yukon winter. (Many of them, of course, rule out having children altogether.) Was this one abandoned, then, as a horrible mistake? The postmortem shows that the murder victim (identity unknown) wasn't the baby's mother, so had she stolen the child? But if the parents (identity unknown) killed her, why didn't they take their daughter with them?
Those forest denizens, who fill most of this story, amount to at least five sets of people. There are two groups of "settlers," who left Rockton decades ago. We've already visited the First Settlement, where Eric lived before the Daltons took him to Rockton, and Eric and Casey go there first while trusted Rockton residents care for the baby. Felicity, granddaughter of the head of the First Settlement, gets involved in the investigation. Now we discover the Second Settlement, quite different in tone from the First--more peaceful, more spiritual, with communal living in two longhouses. The two groups of settlers maintain peace mainly by shunning one another, but their youths have been getting together. Hmm.
Rockton residents, except for the sheriff and his team, are forbidden to go into the forest without explicit permission, and that's because of savage attacks from the "hostiles," individuals who strayed away from Rockton and became something warped and no longer human. Now Casey and Eric learn why they're that way (no spoiler here, sorry) and that there are at least two tightly knit, family-like "tribes" that the Second Settlement folks call "the wild people." One of them is brought back to Rockton to help identify the baby and her parents.
Interpersonal communication is a dicey affair throughout this adventure--it goes without saying that trust is minimal at best between Eric's team and the forest dwellers, and all their dialogue is fairly tense; but it's only as we get to know them well, especially in the Second Settlement, that the dual mysteries can be solved.
Accordingly, this novel features excellent character development all around; it left me feeling I had really stayed for a while in the Second Settlement, while familiar characters from earlier books go through some changes too in the Rockton scenes (also plentiful). And impressive development in both character and training is true of Casey's delightful dog Storm, who of course now outweighs her.
This was a splendid reading experience.