This is my second time reading an Inspector Mislan novel after The Soulless. Instead of going back and reading the author's earlier works that I spotted on Libby, I decided to skip ahead. Because why not, kan? 😂
The timing felt just right too. I was reading this while discussions about UNHCR refugees and illegal immigrants were making headlines around the country, which made some of the themes in the book feel even more relevant.
Inspector Mislan has just returned to the D9 Special Investigations Unit after spending eight months recovering from an attempted murder. Not long after his return, he and his team are assigned to investigate a double murder. Two men have been shot dead inside a house. Nothing appears to be missing, not even bundles of drugs found at the scene. Their first assumption is that it could be a drug deal gone wrong. The problem is that the deeper they dig, the harder it becomes to identify both the killer and the motive.
What I liked was how the author never rushes to connect this suspicious case to the previous one, despite the similarities in the MO being hard to ignore. Instead, he allows the investigation to unfold at its own pace, letting the clues emerge naturally.
Things become even more complicated because the story takes place during the Covid 19 pandemic. With the MCO being extended, an NGO suddenly comes under scrutiny after receiving a large donation from an unknown source. From there, more evidence begins to surface.
The story is packed with police procedural details and the realities of bureaucracy. It also touches on xenophobia, illegal immigration, drugs, PTSD, vigilantism, and the challenges of living through a pandemic. And the ending? Mind blown. Literally. 🫣
I wonder why the television adaptation of the Inspector Mislan series has yet to make it to our screens. Or is it still stuck somewhere in development?