A young London securities trader is getting married, and his best friend since childhood (and best man) takes him on a weekend bicycling trip through the forest they both knew so well as kids. But while camping out, they’re attacked while sleeping. The securities trader is killed and the best friend seriously injured in a brutal knife attack. The clues are few. The friend couldn’t see what was happening in the dark or identify who the killer might be or even look like. The only clue of substance is the friend’s hearing a motorcycle or motorized dirt bike.
Detective Chief Inspector Evan Warlow and his team begin an investigation of a crime that looks random, and yet it doesn’t. Slowly they check everything possible – video footage of nearby roads, backgrounds of the victims that might suggest something, exhaustive interviewing of family, friends, and acquaintances. Some indications point to an incident in the past, but it looks at best inconclusive.
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Rhys Dylan |
Warlow has been coaxed from retirement, but his health issue is still there, and he’ll learn more in about two months. In the meantime, the case gets his full attention, and he soon learns that, like in too many murder investigations, people don’t always tell everything they know.
Caution: Death at Work is the second in the DCI Evan Warlow series by Rhys Dylan, and it’s every bit as good as its predecessor, The Engine House. In Even Warlow, Dylan has created an experienced police detective who’s struggling with a (still unknown) health issue and who often has to allow clues and conversations simmer in his mind before the light bulb pops on.
Dylan has published 15 novels in the DCI Evan Warlow series. A native Welshman educated in London, Dylan wrote numerous books for children and adults under various pen names across several genres. He began writing the DCI Warlow series in 2021; The Engine House was published in 2022. Dylan lives in Wales.
Related:
“The Engine House” by Rhys Dylan.
Some Monday Readings
How One Town Turned a Child’s ‘Cru for Help’ into a Hate Crime – Frannie Block at The Free Press.
Noble Street: The Ruins of London’s Industry – A London Inheritance.
The Burning Season – Paul Kingsnorth at The Abbey of Misrule.
Finding the Lost Generation on a Stroll Through Paris – Jackson Lanzer at Literary Traveler.