David Gurney is a retired NYPD cop with sharp intellect but a collected manner. However, he, as his wife speculates, has a lust for danger and death. Gurney is pulled into another homicide case, with his rough and highly offensive colleague Jack Hardwick. Hardwick was kicked out of the force for bad police work in a previous case, and Gurney owed him a favor.The case they take on is that of Kay Spalter, who is accused of murdering her polictician husband, Carl Spalter, at his mother’s funeral. Gurney slowly unravels a complex plot, only to find that he had tangled it back up on the other side. One step forward, two steps back. All the while, a mysterious figure is present. Said figure has an ambiguous gender, is small, almost pixie- like, and has been spotted at several of the crime scenes.The writing is interesting. While the plot pulled me in, the characters annoyed the hell out of me. If the character wasn’t a cop, he or she was a clichéd version of something. Some characters were annoyingly one dimensional. Furthermore, the strained and almost tense relationship between Madeline and Gurney was not properly, in my opinion, defined. Because the narrative was from Gurney’s point of view and Madeline’s arguments fell flat, I ended up irritated at her. I had no real reason to be, but she was a rather dull character with infuriating arguments. I blamed it on Gurney. Honestly, I think a lot of people unjustly hated Madeline because of the way Verdon wrote her. All she ever did was complain about Gurney’s psychological issues and her chickens. When she wasn’t complaining, she was silently fuming. A lot of the characters were made to have several faults whereas Gurney never really had any faults nor did he develop. Not once did he curse in an offensive manner. Hardwick would be dropping f-bombs like a F-16 and Gurney would calmly explain to Hardwick what an ass he was being, without using the word “ass” or other offensive manners/behaviors. He probably didn’t even shout, really. Overall, I believe the multifaceted plot made up for the oft flat characters. I would have been happier if Gurney had a secret bad habit. For instance, he would throw his non recyclables in the recycle bins just to piss of the sanitation workers because of a run in and a deeply buried grudge. I also would have been happier if the rest of the cast didn’t fall out of a obviously cliched cop movie from the 80s. One of the criminal/informant guys was a Greek guy, who owned a Greek restaurant (called The Odyssey I think), spoke with a Greek accent (trust me, the author conveyed it quite well) and was called.. this is the pièce de résistance, Adonis Angelidis. I am a bit critical, it was a fun read. Sometimes. When I didn’t want to shove Madeline into her chicken coop.