A former Utah prosecutor who’s been idling since a defendant he was trying stabbed him in open court comes back to take on one more case that’s gotten well and truly under his skin.
In the eight years since a killer calling himself the Reaper stabbed and shot three victims before murdering a family of five and then going quiet, pretty much everyone in Tooele County has moved on. But not, evidently, the Reaper, who takes three new victims on the anniversaries of the original murders and sends notes bragging about it. Or maybe not, thinks Tooele County Sheriff Billie Gray, who arrests Braden Toby on the strength of powerful evidence. There’s no possibility that Braden, a high school student of 16, was the original Reaper; Billie thinks he’s a narcissistic copycat who’s sought to enlarge his reputation by imitating the Reaper and adding the abduction of Kelly Greer to his idol’s pattern. Billie urges Solomon Shepard, a neighbor of Kelly’s who’s also a homicide prosecutor sidelined ever since his courtroom shanking, to seize the day, and Solomon pressures County Attorney Knox Scott to turn the case over to him. The judge has it in for Solomon. So does one of his own witnesses. And questioning Braden is like throwing pennies into a dark well. So readers will wait with bated breath to see if Solomon will succeed in getting Braden tried as an adult and put away for good. In the end, the recent killings are smartly wound up, the older ones not so much.
A red-hot suspenser aimed at readers for whom a single serial killer just isn’t enough.