An unspeakably brutal contemporary murder has roots in the 1950s.
Sheriff Porter Beck, whose jurisdiction is sparsely populated Lincoln County, north of Las Vegas, is called to the scene of a singularly savage crime. Retired FBI agent Ralph Atterbury has been bound to the recliner in his home and systematically tortured. Beck and his team have barely begun their investigation when the FBI storms in, in the person of stylish, no-nonsense Special Agent Sana Locke. Interspersed flashbacks take the story to 1955, when destined lovers Freddie Meyer and Kitty Ellison meet at the newly opened Dunes Hotel and Casino, where they both work. Through a family friend, Kitty helps Freddie get a job at the nearby atomic testing site. The more elaborate third-person prose of these chapters plays nicely against Beck’s more direct first-person narrative. Borgos’ debut is solidly anchored in the lively banter between Beck and Locke, who soon give in to their sexual chemistry. More deaths add urgency to the investigation. The 1950s plot, which centers around nuclear testing and the mysterious Project 57, thickens when the ingenuous Freddie is introduced to Georgiy, a Russian whose malevolence will be instantly apparent to everyone but him. This plotline, though interesting, is more successful as history than mystery. Along the way, this series kickoff introduces Beck’s elderly dad and his team of deputies, Wardell, Pete, and Tuffy, the latter of whom proves the most valuable of the three. A clever plot twist gives the third act a welcome infusion of energy.
A solid crime story with an evocative sense of place.