A blizzard and a dead body turn a peaceful retreat into a suspenseful whodunnit in Regan’s mystery novel.
Detective Josie Quinn has been struggling since the death of her beloved colleague Mett. Watching him die was just the latest in a series of traumatic events both on and off the job, and the effects of PTSD are keeping her from focusing or sleeping. To work on her insomnia, Josie signs up for the Sacred New Beginnings Retreat at a remote mountain lodge north of her home in Denton, Pennsylvania. There, the warm and inviting doctor Sandrine Morrow has assembled a small group of six people, each reeling from some traumatic event—harrowing incidents of rape, stalking, murder, and freak accidents have brought them all together. Josie begins to worry that an impending snowstorm will trap them without enough supplies. (“There are worse places to be stuck although the company could be better. Buch of sad sacks, we are,” quips Alice, the wise-cracking New York City nurse with whom Josie quickly bonds.) The lodge’s capable caretaker sets off with the only satellite phone, and the trap for a classic closed-circle mystery is set when one of the retreat participants is soon found dead in the rising snow. Josie does her best to gather what few clues she can, but with wild bears on the prowl, no cell service, and dwindling supplies, the remaining guests have to all work together just to survive, even though they know that one of them is likely a murderer. As therapeutic talk breaks down into tense, violent exchanges, Josie’s husband, Noah, sets out from Denton determined to bring his wife home (and make up for a fight that they had before her departure). While struggling to get through the storm, Noah also stumbles into a dangerous situation stemming from New Beginnings. Both husband and wife will have to face the elements and their inner demons to make it out of this storm alive.
Regan’s setup for this country murder mystery is as classic as it gets, but her clever twist—making each of the possible suspects a victim recovering from trauma—adds a unique layer of emotion to the proceedings. Readers unfamiliar with detective Josie from the other books in Regan’s series will find themselves immediately drawn to her vulnerability—having the book’s earliest scenes depict her sessions with Dr. Morrow is a smart way to dig into the complex protagonist’s psychology before getting into the sleuthing. The lodge storyline becomes a slowly simmering pot of deception and intrigue, while Noah’s parallel adventure punctuates the book with more action-packed thrills—Regan smartly alternates between the two to keep readers turning the pages. The final revelations and motivations feel like they come together a bit too quickly and neatly; the complex psychology driving the first half is eschewed to reveal a much more traditionally evil villain, but Regan still delivers a worthy entry in her series. Readers will be easily drawn in by her smart characters and her snowy mountain setting, both perfectly cozy and creepy.
A well-executed classic mystery to curl up with, featuring an admirably complex hero.