An attorney finds out who abducted her (and her sister) as teens in western Virginia while prosecuting a current case in this legal/crime thriller from Iwan.
Sisters Charlotte and Mari Jones, 18 and 14 years old, respectively, are camping in their hometown western Virginia woods. Charlotte, excited to start college in the fall, is awaiting boyfriend Jack Henry to join them around the campfire. The next thing we know, Charlotte is running from a shadowy attacker and passes out. She wakes up in a cave, eventually finding Mari there, who cries, “He hurt me.” Charlotte then has to fend off their kidnapper, and the girls flee, only to have Mari drown in the nearby river in an attempt to swim to safety. The narrative then jumps 22 years to the 1980s. Charlotte is now a U.S. attorney in D.C., prosecuting the kidnapping/molestation/murder of 8-year-old Kaya Adkins, whose disappearance had captivated the nation. She suspects the accused, a man named Mark Reynolds, is behind ongoing abductions in the area, but frustratingly there’s only evidence linking him to Kaya (and even that is questioned at trial). After the trial, Charlotte continues to dig into his past, which to her shock leads back to her family’s own sheep-rearing farm operations in Virginia. She uncovers more men with connections to the area abductions, including some she knows. Relying on players she doesn’t completely trust, and learning more about the tensions between the area’s Welsh-descended farmers and Monacan tribe, Charlotte ultimately gets answers while racing against the clock to expose a human trafficking ring just as another young girl goes missing.
Author Iwan has crafted a thriller that grabs reader interest from the get-go, given its shocking child abduction opening that will have readers (much like Charlotte) determined to seek clarity and closure on a tragic incident, which is effectively conveyed via murky, shadowy description. This book also contains clever slow reveals of several key details, including the identity of the “mystery man” that visits Charlotte in her D.C. apartment and why one instance of her awakening half-naked is not as threatening as it might seem. Although the cultural concerns and fears of Native Americans ultimately provide some context for why this horrific crime ring was held a secret for so long, the ethnic backgrounds of people in this Virginia community are not always apparent. Some plot elements are a bit fantastical, given the less than convincing evidence. It’s also a bit surprising that Charlotte, an area kidnapping victim herself, would be tapped to prosecute Kaya’s case in the first place, although this circumstance also helps to foster a tension-building sense of paranoia, with Charlotte at one point remarking to her family, “But what does it all mean? What are you going to suggest next? That it wasn’t a coincidence that I was assigned to Kaya’s case?” Charlotte’s interludes with her family, while serving as heartwarming contrast to the dark doings of the community that she soon exposes, prove tedious at times, with descriptions of meal-making and tea-drinking occasionally serving as frustrating interruptions to the main action.
Nifty, twisty suspense requiring some suspension of disbelief.