Detective Jackie (Jackson) Cooke is in her last few weeks of work before she goes off on maternity leave. At almost eight months pregnant (this is the second or third book which I have read recently where the investigating officer is heavily pregnant, seems to be a popular trope at the moment), Jackie is stressed dealing with her obnoxious boss, irritating mother, feckless husband, & their rambunctious nine-year-old twin boys alongside being the only one bringing in any real money. To top it off, her reliable partner, Detective Dave Tang is about to leave on holiday for two weeks, so when the body of a young woman is found outside a local pub in Manchester, Jackie is going to be snowed under.
The body of Chloe Smedley is left carefully posed but is missing her limbs. The murder of anyone is horrible but this one strikes particularly close to home as Chloe had Down's Syndrome, as did Jackie's younger brother Lucian, who disappeared one day from a playground & was never heard of again. CCTV from outside Chloe's school seem to show that she knew her killer & went willingly to meet them, & they knew how to hide from the cameras. As Jackie & her small team start to investigate, the case widens out into a possible serial killer case as it comes apparent that vulnerable people have been going missing from the area for years but a pattern has never been established. How many victims have there been & was Lucian one of them?
I found this one difficult to rate. On the one hand, the plot itself is good, tightly written, & the main character is easy to like, but on the other there are some annoyances. First of all, is the obligatory conflict between two women (Jackie & her boss) - oh to read a book where women actually support one another. Secondly - Gus, not sure I have ever hated a character as much since I read Tess of the D'Urbervilles & developed a loathing of Angel Clare. Gus is a father of two (soon to be three) who leaves it to his wife to bring in the all money whilst he faffs about with his band doing the odd gig here & there, who thinks its babysitting to look after his own kids (no love, it's called parenting), & seems to do nothing except whine & freeload off his wife.
Overall I'm rating this 3.5 stars (rounded up to 4 on sites which do not accept half star ratings) mainly because I really did think the plot was well done. I did work out whodunnit as it was fairly obvious. If this is going to be a series though, I think Jackie & her team have great potential.
My thanks to NetGalley & publishers, Bookouture, for the opportunity to read an ARC.