Off the Grid: A Mystery. Robert McCaw. Oceanview Publishing. July 2, 2019; pb, 304 pp.; ISBN #: 9781608093618.
On the main island of
Hawaii lie numerous fields of lava-strewn, barren ground that have destroyed
almost all homes, buildings, and cars in the path of exploding volcanoes spread
throughout the Big Island. The mystery begins when a tattered piece of cloth
leads to the remains of a man who has obviously been tortured before he was
murdered and then destroyed in a horrific explosion when a truck and car
collide. A blood-curdling scream is
heard as Chief Detective Koa responds to the scene but is followed by an
explosion that completely destroys the car which had held the screaming woman. So begins the hunt for the planners of what
quickly seems a planned murder of both victims.
Meanwhile, an election is
looming for governor and one of the campaigner’s policies involves drastic cuts
in the police department, including laying off one of Koa’s peers who lost his
legs in a work-related criminal investigation.
Smithy is twenty-one months away from a pension, one Koa and their peers
believe is well-deserved. There’s also
something strange about the way the would-be governor, the mayor and the head
of the police are cozying up with each other that goes beyond the usual
political machinations.
This then is mystery
driven by seemingly insignificant but related past facts. What is a former Navy Seal doing with
spending hours growing variations of orchids.
What is his girlfriend, a former spy, doing with boxes of money that
arrive regularly from China? Who are the
goons that try to insert themselves in the investigation supposedly on behalf
of the CIA in Langley, Washington?
Koa has his own secrets,
ones that he has sublimated into a hunger for seeking justice wherever he finds
it questioned or abused. He does not
brook fools or interference, even with supposedly patriotic or noble
motivations. The struggle will reach all
the way back to the beginning of the Iranian nuclear arms policy and a number
of American and Chinese spies involved in the Kosovo crisis of the 1990s.
Koa has unbelievable but
remarkable detective skills and leaves no stone unturned in his search for the
truth and justice regarding these two murders.
He is well-connected and capable of making connections where others
would fail to tread. This is remarkable
international thriller plot that will more than satisfy others who love to read
this particular genre. Injustice ranges
from Indonesian killer goons to the top of CIA and Chinese politicians.
Off
the Grid is fine historical and mystery
fiction. Well done, Robert McCaw.
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