Movie actors, mobsters, a suspicious death, and an unexpected romance enliven a Texas town.
In his uneven but enjoyable fourth installment of a mystery series, Rusz returns readers to Brewster County, Texas, and its growing cast of colorful characters headed by handsome Sheriff Clayton Shoot. Written in a lighter vein than previous volumes of the series, the book blends family secrets and a down-home version of Shakespearean romantic intrigue with a film crew and a questionable crime. Did wealthy ranch owner Tilda Quigg die from a fall down the stairs, or did her local political nemesis, the sheriff’s prickly, outspoken older sister, Beatrice, push her? Townsfolk are whispering. And why is Tilda’s live-in ranch manager, Buck Anderson, talking to seedy mobsters about plans to turn her huge spread into an adult entertainment destination? But the mystery (and its underwhelming midnovel surprise) takes a back seat to dueling matchmakers’ efforts to get Clayton and one-time girlfriend Claire Harp back together and to convince sharp-tongued Beatrice and equally brusque, retired Master Sgt. Benny Peyton that they belong together, à la Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing.As in previous installments, apart from the series opener, The Window Trail (2018), perpetually blushing Clayton and indecisive English professor Claire’s cooling-to-moribund relationship is the least intriguing element. Readers will be much more excited about the hapless gangsters, bumptious Beatrice, and the attraction between the story’s most appealing characters: loner cowboy Loris Garrett and Belinda Briggs, a smitten young Hollywood actor. She and movie star Marlo Hansbury,who has Clayton in her sights, are among a trio of actors on hand for romance and hookups while in town shooting a film based on the recent homicide that occurred in the county (chronicled in The Lost Mine Trail, 2020). Throughout, the author once again demonstrates his series’ greatest strength: a deeply informed depiction of the sprawling Texas setting, from town and ranch life to rugged, two-rut roads and “gorges and canyons, plains and moonscapes, mountains pressing upon mountains, like they were sliding out of sight.”
An engaging mystery in a vivid setting with offbeat characters and a sense of fun.