The Third Grave is the fourth instalment in the Pierce Reed and Nikki Gillette Savannah series in which bestselling author Lisa Jackson at last brings her unique brand of Southern Gothic back to the beautiful, haunted city of Savannah, Georgia in this forebodingly atmospheric novel of suspense. In the wake of a violent hurricane, the city’s left doused and windswept. But as the floodwaters recede, long-buried secrets rise to the surface. Literally. In a secret crypt inside the rotting root cellar of an abandoned pre-Civil War mansion that sits crumbling on the banks of a river, three graves are discovered but only two skeletons. For crime writer Nikki Gillette, who is also a reporter for the Savannah Sentinel newspaper, the discovery is both a muse and a gift – the perfect subject for her next book. Her husband, Detective Pierce Reed, has made her promise not to get involved with the case, but she can’t stay away, even when her investigations put her pregnancy at risk. She simply cannot seem to refrain from asking him a barrage of questions as she believes this could be exactly the break she needs to make a big splash in the publishing world.
Twenty years ago, three sisters, who were part of the Duval family, went to the movies with their older brother, Owen, and seemingly disappeared. Forensics confirms the remains found in two of the graves belonged to the older girls twelve-year-old Holly and ten-year-old Poppy but if the third is empty, what happened to the youngest sister, four-year-old Rose? As Nikki dredges deeper into the mystery, one thing becomes dangerously clear. There is more to the sisters’ disappearance than anyone ever guessed. And far from an isolated act, those deaths were just the beginning. Despite starting quite slowly and it taking a little longer than I'm usually used to for to become immersed and gripped enough to propel me through the pages, I soon was engrossed in the mystery. There is quite a lot of action, some of it unnecessary and inconsequential to the plot, but I still found it compelling and a well-crafted yarn, and although I'm not a fan of Nikki as she's very self-centred and stupidly impulsive, the mystery kept me invested in wanting to know what happened to the Duval girls two decades ago. An entertaining and twisty-turny read.