THE LAST PLACE YOU LOOK by Kristen Lepionka: Book Review
Still recovering from her father’s death and the mixed feelings she has about him, private investigator Roxane Weary takes on a new case. She’s called by Danielle Stockton, the sister of a man on death row who’s two months away from being executed, to search for the person Danielle believes can prove her brother’s innocence.
Danielle is convinced that Brad was unjustly convicted of killing his girlfriend’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cook. Brad has always maintained his innocence despite the fact that the police found the murder weapon, a Kershaw folding knife, in his car. The Cooks’ daughter, Sarah, disappeared on the night of the murder and hasn’t been seen in the fifteen years since.
The police consensus is that Brad killed Sarah as well, moving her body and disposing of it, something he also denies. But when his attorney suggested that he name Sarah as the possible killer at the trial, Brad refused, vehemently denying she could have done any such thing.
Now Danielle tells Roxane that she saw Sarah the previous week walking out of a gas station; by the time Danielle was able to cross the busy intersection Sarah had driven away. Danielle is certain Sarah would be able to exonerate Brad if Roxane could find her. But Roxane has a lot of questions. Can it be that Sarah has really reappeared after so long? If it’s really Sarah, why didn’t she come forward at the trial to save her boyfriend, assuming his story is true? What if Sarah doesn’t want to be found? Or, if found, she says that Brad is in fact guilty?
At her mother’s house shortly after accepting the case, Roxane jimmies the lock on the door of the study, a room no one in the family except her father was allowed to enter. Once inside she starts looking through the logs of cases he investigated while a police detective and comes across the one she herself is investigating. She discovers that Sarah was not the only missing teenage girl in town, that there were at least two others. Does this help or hurt her case? Does it help to validate Brad’s story, or does it mean that he had killed before?
Roxane’s persistence in looking into the case is getting her in trouble with the police in Belmont, the town where the Cooks were knifed to death. One officer after another pulls her car over or requests that she talk to them about why she’s in Belmont, and each one tells her he is convinced that the actual killer is in jail. Even though Roxane brings up the unsolved cases of the other missing girls to the police chief, she’s not convincing anyone that Brad may be innocent or that Sarah may still be alive.
Roxane, as the popular saying goes, carries a lot of baggage. There are the difficulties she’s had with her parents, her often out-of-control drinking, and her confusing sexual relations. All of those things impinge on her personal life but not on her ability to investigate Brad’s case. She’s tough, determined, often reckless, and you will be rooting for her success every step of the way. The Last Place You Look is a terrific debut that will keep you mystified until the final chapter.
You can read about Kristen Lepionka at this website.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her website.