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WATCHER IN THE WOODS

Book Cover

A Canadian town whose population includes people running from
criminals and criminals running from the consequences of their crimes is
infiltrated by a U.S. Marshal bent on bringing an unnamed resident to justice.

Rockton Detective Casey Butler is on an unusual new mission.
Usually something of a maverick working alone to solve crimes, Casey has relied
on the help of her sheriff, Eric Dalton, who’s not only her technical superior
and frequent investigative collaborator, but the first man she’s ever committed
to living with or calling her boyfriend. The two leave the safe haven of
Rockton, a secret town in the Yukon, to recruit Casey’s sister, April, a gifted
doctor, to operate on Kenny, a resident who’s been badly injured. Although
Casey and April have never been close, Casey convinces April to sneak into town
to save Kenny’s life. The bigger hurdle is getting April to Rockton without
alerting the town council, especially Phil, its hidebound new leader. Rockton
is a planned community of residents hiding from outside threats, but the town’s
pay-to-play rules mean that some residents are perpetrators of crimes hiding
out to avoid paying their debts to society. After April comes to town, Casey
and Dalton discover a man camping out in the surrounding woods. Mark Garcia
identifies himself as a U.S. Marshal on the hunt for a Rockton resident he
won’t identify except to say that the fugitive’s psychopathic tendencies will
endanger residents. Casey and Dalton, uncertain whether it’s riskier to work
with Garcia or against him, are unable to wrest the resident’s name from Garcia
before he’s shot and killed. Now Casey must work with Dalton to counteract that
threat to Rockton as she tries to forge a path to peace with April.

Building on the hidden world she’s built, Armstrong focuses less
on the moody atmosphere earlier installments (This Fallen Prey, 2018,
etc.) have favored than on the politics and interpersonal dynamics of her
metaphorical lions and lambs—though it seems like everyone here is a bit of a
lion.

kirkusreviews.com

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