In an insular town in Northern Minnesota, a series of crimes stretches two Bureau of Criminal Apprehension agents to their limits.
Harry Steinbeck is a rigid forensic scientist whose partner, Evangeline Reed, is intuitive and tends to bend rules. Both have pasts that haunt them. When Harry was a teenager, his sister vanished and was never found; Van grew up in a cult run by a charismatic grifter with an iron hand. Their latest assignment involves a cold case that’s turned hot since a body was found with a crushed skull and shotgun wounds—just like the earlier victims. Back in 1998, the entire Korhonen family was murdered while they slept in the town of Alku, where all the villagers are descendants of Finns originally driven out of their country under suspicion of witchcraft. Almost everyone in town works at the Carlton County Treatment Center, originally a hospital, then a psychiatric institution, and now basically a nursing home for serial killers. The dead man, Peter Weiss, was a nurse there. Harry usually avoids Duluth, where his mother still lives, because he blames himself for never having found his sister. The new, or old, case just adds to his guilt and stress. All the Alku families bear a strange resemblance to one another. That includes head psychiatrist Pekka Tervo, who’s married to a dead ringer for Nurse Ratched, and who can’t admit that the old and new cases are connected. The adult residents of Alku are keeping their secrets so closely guarded that only their children can help Harry and Van find the truth.
Mystery and horror mix in a creepy novel whose suspenseful ending hints at a very special sequel.