It’s a time of high-stakes testing for the sheriff’s department in Tooele County, Utah.
The latest crime wave Sheriff Billie Gray and her deputies have to deal with starts at the very top. Tooele mayor Dennis Yang has been brutally slashed to death in an apparent suicide. As that analysis starts to look more and more doubtful, someone attacks District Attorney Roger Lynch, whom everyone in the city is united in disliking. Seeking information from incarcerated gang boss Bigfoot Tommy, Billie’s old friend Solomon Shepard—a former prosecutor who’s being tormented by a series of ingratiating and menacing text messages—agrees to deliver a truck to an address Tommy provides, even though he knows it’s a sketchy favor. And Dax Granger, the ex-boyfriend who’s been stalking Billie despite an injunction forbidding all contact with her, retaliates by swearing out a protective order against her. What makes this particular epidemic of felonies especially hard is the possibility that the crimes have infiltrated the corridors of power, as Billie realizes when she catches a pair of male deputies who’ve installed a spy camera in the women’s shower room. As if that’s not enough stress for Billie, Deputy Mazie Heaton, her most recent hire, fails to show up for the date who’s waiting for her at a bar. Mazie’s obviously been kidnapped, but why, and by whom? With so many lawbreaking candidates lined up, the suspects will have to take a number. The biggest letdown comes when Solomon identifies the prime mover behind this carnival of crime: a big reveal as disappointing as it is logical.
A betwixt-and-between installment from someone who’s done, and will do, much better work.