A ritualistic murder draws a resolute detective into the murky world of Hawaiian legends and mysticism.
Maui Police Capt. Walter Alaka’i and his niece, Detective Kali Māhoe, are called to a rugged mountain crime scene in the Kula Forest Reserve, where the body of a tortured young woman has been found hanging from a rainbow tree. A missing person’s report leads Kali to identify the victim as 24-year-old Maya Louise Holmes, an employee with the Center for Marine Mining and Research. With the help of dedicated young Officer David Hara, Kali’s investigation proceeds incrementally and methodically, moving from Maya’s brother, Charles, to her missing car to the interrogation of her co-workers. Haunted by the crime, Kali’s thoughts keep returning to the strange position and condition of the body. Bizarre reports from nearby residents that a band of witches regularly flies through the trees and prowls the beaches echo stories of sorcery that Kali remembers being told as a child by her grandmother, a historian. Was Maya’s murder related to her research or to the occult? Recurring potential love interest Elvar Ellinsson provides more legends of Hawaiian witchcraft, accompanies Kali on her reexamination of the murder scene, and plays bodyguard when Kali is the victim of a break-in. Bokur’s formula is familiar but effectively executed, without flash but with admirable clarity and economy. The straightforward, linear structure and slow roll of her third Dark Paradise mystery (following The Bone Field, 2021) allow the story’s abundant local color to take center stage.
A cool police procedural with engaging characters and fascinating components.