See Them Run is a Scottish police procedural. The first in a new series by author Marion Todd, featuring DI Clare Mackay.
Following an incident in the Glasgow armed response unit, DI Mackay left her life behind, and asked for a transfer that landed her in the coastal town of St Andrews, between Edinburgh and Dundee.
She’s two months into her post when a guest to a wedding gets run over by a car, twice (better be sure), after having been purposely led outside the reception. Bizarre detail, a card with the number 5 is left on the body. Thus begins the classic procedure of investigating an homicide. That is, until a second death happens in the same fashion, and a « 4 » card is found on the new body. This becomes a serial killing case and, the only link between the two very different victims seems to be their use of the Darknet, which could mean anything, from care for privacy to the worst criminal activities.
See Them Run is a densely packed thriller, never leaving the reader a minute to breathe. This serial killer isn’t playing games and acts swiftly, with determination. There are no riddles nor « catch me if you can ». The victims pile up fast and the investigators race to catch up, with a specially detached DCI breathing down their neck. This DCI having been a close friend of the second victim. A prominent member of the community.
The author nevertheless takes time to introduce all of the elements I’ve learned to love in good British crime books and shows. By the end of the novel, we’ve learned a lot about DI Mackay’s personal and professional lives, and those of her new team in St Andrews.
The investigation also closes up nicely, with a burst of several clever final twists I didn’t see coming.
This left me yearning for more. Fortunately, the second book in the series, In Plain Sight, is due to be released on February 20, 2020, and I’ve had the pleasure of being granted an advance copy of it (prompting me to buy and read this first entry).
Brush up on your Scottish before reading. My Kindle’s dictionary has been useful a handful of times.
Will the second book measure up to the first ? I’m going to find out right away.