An alcoholic attorney’s second murder case looks every bit as impossible as his first.
The morning after former high school football star Trey Cowan, reduced to sanitation work by a broken leg and a botched surgery, threatens to kill Sgt. Kelly Flowers, meth lord Tyson Cade’s inside man on Alabama’s Marshall County police force, Flowers is found shotgunned to death at a deserted farm. When Trey is arrested, Cade—who warned personal injury lawyer Jason Rich not to defend his own sister when she was accused of murder in Rich Blood (2022)—demands that Jason take the case pro bono. Trey refuses to tell Jason anything that might help in his defense, and the evidence against him is so damning that Jason is reduced to begging Cade for help. Cade, determined to play the piper who calls the tune, produces an alternative suspect, but it’s the last person in the world Jason wants to incriminate. In the meantime, Cade has anointed a new inside source in the police department, and Det. Hatty Daniels, the supervisor who’d opened an investigation of Flowers before his death, is convinced that it must be her boss, Sheriff Richard Griffith, or her old partner, Sgt. George Mitchell, since only they could have wiped her files on Flowers from her hard drive. With such a short list of suspects, Jason’s job should be easy, but the pressures on him from his ex-lover, his impossible niece, his nonpaying boss, and the legal system that’s pressing charges against him are so intense that he realizes that “I could win this case…and still lose everything I care about.”
Not much of a mystery but a compelling dive into the life of a lawyer out way past his depth.