Insurance investigator Bill Kemp is at a bit of a loose end, and makes a long overdue trip to visit his old Army friend, lawyer Kenny Hines, for an Australian Christmas. Bill is given a warm welcome by Kenny and his wife Dolly. He is enthralled by the views from their house across Sydney Bay, especially of the newly built Sydney Opera House, but it is one of Kenny's legal cases that really piques his interest.
Newlyweds, Sophie and Adam Church have come out to Sydney to meet Kenny, in order to find out about an unexpected inheritance from Sophie's uncle, George Deakins - an uncle Sophie did not even know she had. The details are hazy, but it seems Sophie is now the owner of a remote farm and opal mine in the Outback, at a place so off-the-beaten-track that even the nearest town of Oodnadatta is several hours' drive away. It all comes as a bit of a shock to orphaned Sophie, to say the least.
While Sophie is trying to get her head around her potential windfall, things start to get ugly. Someone is determined that she will never get her hands on her inheritance, and when veiled threats spill over into shocking violence, the only answer is for Sophie and Adam head out to the Deakins property under the care of Bill Kemp to get to the bottom of the mystery.
Outback continues the story of insurance investigator Bill Kemp that began in Domino Island - a novel completed by Michael Davies from an unfinished manuscript left behind by best-selling, thriller writer Desmond Bagley, after his death in 1983. I have not read Domino Island, but this all new adventure can be easily read as a stand-alone, as Davies helpfully fills in just enough of the backstory for you to get a handle on Kemp's character right from the kick-off.
This novel begins very much in slow-burn country, with a cosy reunion between old friends, at a time when Kemp is assessing where life takes him next. His skills are a perfect match for a little bit of digging into the mystery around George Deakins' surprise legacy, and as it happens, they are very much needed when events take a menacing turn and the Outback seems an unlikely respite from danger on the streets of Sydney.
The story really takes off once the road trip gets underway, with Kemp at the helm, attempting to keep Sophie and her apparently feckless new husband Adam safe from the perils of the Outback - and the hostile environment is soon made even more dangerous by less than welcoming locals, and the appearance of a group of mercenaries that mean business. The pace heats up nicely in line with the rising temperatures of the sun-baked wilderness, and there is plenty of action and intrigue to keep you on the edge of your seat, with a delicious National Treasure-esque thread as our little team of adventurers put the pieces of the puzzle together. There are some nicely contrived twists, and Davies does a splendid job of bringing the Outback alive.
I am a sucker for an Outback tale, and although this does lack the intensity, emotional kick, and jaw-dropping reveals of the more seasoned Australian authors that have made this genre their own, such as Chris Hammer and Jane Harper, its old school thrills and spills are enormous fun. This has such a nostalgic air, and it really echoes the feel of a classic adventure in the style of Desmond Bagley and co - which I take my hat off to Davies for doing so well. As a first and very entertaining, solo foray into the genre, this book hints at great things on the horizon, and I look forward to what comes next from Michael Davies.