Thank you to Red Adept Publishing and Library Thing for giving me an advance copy of this book. Set in the Florida Panhandle, the novel evoked a strong sense of place, and the author did a good job of portraying the police detective characters.
I had trouble getting into the story because it jumps around in time, introduces a lot of characters, and then jumps to another time with different characters. It is told from multiple viewpoints.
In the most recent time period, 1992, two lawyers are murdered and another man is mysteriously run off the road, where he abandons his car, takes off into the swamp, and dies from a snake bite. Ray and Luke, the detectives investigating the cases, are certain there must be a connection.
Kate Garcia, Ray's girlfriend, works as a librarian and remembers both lawyers had recently looked at the same microfiche article about an unsolved murder that took place 20 years earlier. She's in no hurry to share this information with the police, however.
I was slow to figure out that Kate Garcia and Kitty Pettus (from the 1959 Prologue) are the same person. Her best friends from the Prologue, Nicky and CeCe, are now estranged, but we don't know why.
Almost midway through the book, we get a long flashback from 1972, about Nicky's involvement with drug smuggling, along with Kitty's dying father, Tank, and a number of other thugs. Bobby, the ringleader, lusts after Kitty, much to the chagrin of Nicky and Tank. Kitty and CeCe were only peripherally involved in the operation, but the men sometimes used Kitty's van to transport their contraband. One night, a marijuana deal goes terribly wrong, resulting in the murders of four people; two bodies were stashed in Kitty's van and driven into a sinkhole.
Apparently, the group all went their separate ways after that incident.
But after the 1992 lawyer murders, the 1972 tragedy is revived, and Kate/Kitty walks straight into a trap.
Except for a few parts where I had to suspend disbelief, this was a compelling mystery.