A stolid Nevada sheriff learns that no community is immune from modern societal afflictions.
The elaborate 17th birthday party of Shiloah Roy is disrupted by a fireball in the sky, the explosion of a remotely piloted aircraft 92,000 feet above the Double J Ranch. The bizarre accident momentarily distracts Shiloah’s father, Jesse, from his customary attention to his volatile daughter. Meanwhile, Sheriff Porter Beck is responding to a distress call at the Pioneer Hotel. Though Lincoln County features ranches and wide-open spaces, its proximity to Las Vegas brings problems like the fatal drug overdose of Beck’s closest friend, Cash Conrad, at the Pioneer. Soon, Special Agent Ed Maddox of the Air Force’s Office of Special Investigations arrives, seeking cooperation from Beck. The only casualty of the initial incident at the Double J is a bull, but later victims will include 30 dead steers. Because these crimes have a tech element, suspicion falls on Shiloah’s friend Mercy Vaughn, a brilliant 16-year-old hacker who’s currently in a juvenile detention facility. The seriousness of the case is underscored by the introduction of South Korean political consultant Dal Cho, who after receiving a distressing message heads for Lincoln County. Beck and his sister, Brinley Cummings, question Mercy—Brin thinks she’s innocent; Beck, not so much. The sheriff’s second outing is written with clarity and quiet authority; the book balances his complex cases with the fully realized community surrounding him and effectively addresses current issues.
A timely procedural that packs a subtle wallop.