Cops & Robbers
Parker City Mystery, #5
by
Justin M. Kiska
Another intriguing mystery with its roots in the past.
Cops & Robbers is the fifth outing for Parker City’s crack detective team, Sgt. Ben Winters and Tommy Mason, in Justin M. Kiska’s outstanding Parker City Mystery series. With its absorbing and puzzling dual timeline plot and engaging recurring main characters, as with the previous books, I couldn’t put this one down either.
The setting is 1985, Maryland, when Parker City’s two-person Detective Bureau confronts two burglaries that occur on the same day in the wealthier section of the city. Already aware of a burglary ring operating unhindered in the neighboring community of Wakeville, Detective Sergeant Ben Winters and Detective Tommy had been on the alert that their town may eventually be targeted for its juicier pickings. However, from the start, the two Parker City break-ins don’t match the established MO of the Wakeville crimes. At the first home, the thieves pass up all the usual valuables to grab a heavy floor safe, and in the second, the homeowner, a beloved society woman, is murdered. With few clues to work on and a lot of scrutiny from higher-ups, Ben and Tommy are under pressure to solve the cases and stop what looks like a deadly crime spree.
As is the case in the previous novels in this series, the plot also includes a storyline from the city’s past with implications for the present. In this instance, the story moves to 1927 and features a series of home invasion burglaries in another wealthy residential area in nearby Baltimore. As the number of burglaries mounts and a death occurs, Baltimore’s top detective, Lt. Cranshaw, is assigned to get to the bottom of things quickly. In a unique twist, the local crime boss is also invested in finding and stopping the unknown perpetrators from poaching on his territory without permission, and it becomes a race between the two to get to the burglars first.
This unusual double police procedural moves quickly with Ben and Tommy in their timeline and Cranshaw in his methodically working their leads and following their gut instincts. The historical details of both eras were fascinating and fun, with at least one Easter Egg from past stories casually inserted into the narrative, and there was an excellent suspect in the more modern timeline who I really had trouble trusting. The two stories eventually converge as Ben and Tommy investigate, and the final resolution is plausible and satisfying. Even though this book is the fifth in the series, it can easily be read and enjoyed on its own. However, each book in the series keeps getting better and better, and none should be missed.
I recommend COPS & ROBBERS to readers of historical mysteries and historical police procedurals, especially those who would enjoy a Maryland setting.
I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advanced Review Copy from the author through Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours.