Lila Ridgefield is a woman who’s had enough. She’s survived traumatic family events from her past, only to find out that her husband, Aaron, a popular high school math teacher, is involved in sordid activities with some of his female students. Emotionally, she’s pretty numb to it all and just plain over it.
Most women, at this point, would just leave their husband, right? Not Lila. She plans a more permanent solution - only, things don’t quite go as planned when his SUV with his body inside goes missing from the school field she meticulously staged him to be found at.
Where is he? Did he somehow survive? Who’s leaving notes for her that clearly communicate that they know what she did? And the biggest question of all: Is she going to get away with it? To complicate these questions, we’re told through Nia Simms and her popular Gone Missing podcast, that three other young college-aged women have disappeared from the area as well. How do they fit into the picture? These are the questions that propel the story along to its gripping conclusion.
One could argue that this is a female empowerment story, not in the sense of arguing that women should go out and off the men that annoy them. (Breathe easy, guys.) Rather, this book is full of strong female characters, motivated by their own personal experiences and sense of morality to pursue what they believe is right. Lila is mortified by her husband’s secret, which initially only she knows, and she’s defiantly unapologetic in her actions to remedy the situation and seek justice for her husband’s victims. She’s also smart and cunning enough to know how to cover her tracks. Ginny Davis is a highly intelligent lead investigator who’s smart enough to know the truth of what happened but lacks the evidence and support from her male superior to wrap up the case. The cat-and-mouse game between these two ladies is the high point of this book, and I was honestly rooting for both of them, despite them being on opposite sides of the case!
As with many thrillers, I felt most of the men were a bit too stereo-typed: stuffed shirt, alpha male, largely unlikeable, temper-tantrum throwing, woman-oppressing jerks. I get its purpose in the storyline, but it gets a little old after awhile. On the other hand, at least this story avoided the equally ever-present, women as confused, over-emotional, unreliable, weak and whiny trope, so there’s that. Yay us! There were few real surprises for me, but it’s a solid mystery/thriller with a fantastic and rewarding ending, and I had a lot of fun with it!
★★★★