After more than a decade this final installment of the Frank Elder series is brutal and sad. In this story Frank has been retired for some time, and assists the Devon and Cornwall Police Major Incident Support Team near his home. He still has a strong temper that got him into trouble in the past, and he and Katherine still have a shakey relationship. When she comes to visit unexpectedly, he has agreed not ask questions, but he is unable to completely overlook the bandages on her wrists. He begins a campaign to check in with her, communicatiing with her flatmates.
There are multiple reasons for the murder of Anthony Winter, not the least of which his kinky sexual predilictions. Frank beats him up when the explicit paintings of Katherine, Frank's daughter and model for Anthony, are showing at a gallery party Frank attends. Katherine, herself, comes under close scrutiny when tapes of their edgy sexual encounters are revealed. Anthony had broken off their relationship that Katherine was seriously invested in, cutting her wrists after the breakup. The paintings of her were altered after she saw them, adding sexual, "nasty" overtones. Simply put Anthony was not a likeable man, and the past catches up with him. There is a lengthy investigation that seems to be going nowhere, until a former lover returns and talks to the police about her discomfort with Anthony's using Melissa, his daughter as a nude model. His son, Matthew, finds out about Anthony's involvement with his own daughter and Matthew's sister. Matthew is military and beats his father to death with the manacles and chains the artist was fond of using in his games and art. A heartwrenching conclusion for this family.
Running parallel to this plot is the escape of Adam Keach, the brutal killer, who had in a previous installment kidnapped, tortured and raped Katherine, putting her at particular vulnerability. It is some time before he is caught, and during that period he rapes and murders others. Then he goes after Frank, as the policeman who put him in prison, brutally beating and stabbing him. Frank doesn't come out of this encounter, and we left with the picture of his ashes being spread out over the ocean near his home.
I remember liking this series very much, and am sad to see the outcome in this fourth book. This was a well written and fast-paced tale that shared again the compelling character of Frank Elder.