Detective Lexi Bennett book 2.
Its early in the series but I’m already really engaged with Lexi Bennett. As far as Detective Inspectors go in modern fiction Lexi is relatively “normal”, and for me that’s a refreshing change.
When she almost stumbles across a crime scene its the start of an investigation that takes us into an area that is becoming increasingly more concerning.
A young girl falls from a tower, but is it suicide or was she pushed?
The girl is a student at a school where she sings in the choir. It’s also a school where Lexi’s nephew is a student, and when he hears about the death he is insistent that Lexi finds out what really happened.
With her boss telling her that this investigation should be carried out by local officers, not Lexi’s major crime team, she asks to be let carry on until it can be established why the girl killed herself.
But then a second death, another musically talented child is found dead.
A coincidence? No
But who is responsible.
That is when the story goes into a world that is becoming a daily reality.
Influnencers.
Puppeteers working online to bend peoples thoughts and emotions, and in this case its not fashion trends they are pushing, or the latest music videos, it’s pushing vulnerable people to a place where they want to end their own lives. And then being there to make sure they don’t back out at the last second.
Lexi and her team work quickly to identify what is going on, and why these young people have taken their own lives.
The big question is, has a crime even been committed.
I really enjoyed this story. Yes, we as readers know straight away that somebody is leading these students, praying on their vulnerability, and is ultimately responsible for their deaths, but the Police don’t.
The tenacity of Lexi, and her team, does eventually lead to a proper investigation being carried out, but it takes time, and they take a lot of pressure from above to write the deaths off as not being suspicious.
The story plays on the fact that there are introverted vulnerable people that seek solace online, instead of turning to their family.
It shows the way people can hide behind pseudonyms and groom vulnerable people.
In my youth bullies were a physical presence. People that could not hide behind a keyboard or computer screen. They got away with being abusive by hiding their behaviour from those strong enough to stand up for the people who were suffering.
Today they can remain anonymous. Even the victim doesn’t know who they are being abused, or groomed by.
How is that a fair fight.
And if the victim isn’t ever physically touched, just coerced, from a distance, how can the police ever find a perpetrator.
There have been a few books covering this subject recently, including Robert Galbraith’s (Yes, I know who it is really) The Ink Black Heart, but this is the best one I’ve read.
A great story in a series that has quickly made it on to my must-reads-as-soon- as-available list.
Pages: 401. Publisher: Bookouture. Publishing Date. 11th July 2023