A naked corpse that washes ashore proves to be just the tip of a homicidal iceberg.
The discovery of a dead girl with a rope around her neck on a Fort Lauderdale beach triggers a call to detective (and narrator) Sloan McPherson of the Underwater Investigation Unit. Medical examiner Josh Kaperman concludes that Nicole Donnelly was indeed strangled, but by hand, not a rope. This is the first of several inconsistencies that make Sloan suspect that the case will be complex, a hunch that’s confirmed with every new twist in her investigative path. Mayne’s fourth UIU thriller lands like an episode of a long-running forensic crime TV series, with a large cast of crisply depicted witnesses and supporting regulars who make cameo appearances every chapter or three. Although Scott Hughes, Sloan’s sidekick in previous installments, is away in training, she finds welcome support from gritty veteran detective Gwen Wylder, the perfect partner for a case focused on women at risk. Clues emerge at a truck station that may be the scene of unsavory sexual activity; in the ocean, courtesy of an Underwater Robotic Vehicle; through a trio of thugs Sloan nicknames Silver Teeth, Brio, and Half Face; and from a charismatic cult leader. The plot comes together like the proverbial puzzle, each juicy piece adding a bit to a disturbing big picture.
A savvy police procedural that executes a familiar formula with panache.