Sheriff Martin Holman was never much of a cop. Everybody who worked with him quietly knew that. He was more of a gladhander. He was the guy you went to when you needed to get a federal grant written for a piece of equipment or a vehicle. He was the one you approached when the city council was having difficulty finalizing a law-enforcement budget, and you needed someone who could put that over the top. But he would occasionally dip a finger or even a hand into the business of policing, and when he did, he was better at it than those around him might have realized.
On a summer day, the sheriff and his Canadian brother-in-law fly a small plane over a seemingly nondescript section of the county. Something terrible happens; the plane crashes, and both men die almost instantly. That terrible something turns out to have been a bullet that tore through the bottom of the plane and literally unzipped the pilot’s aorta. The sheriff, not versed in flight, had neither the time nor the experience necessary to save himself.
Naturally, investigators couldn't help but wonder why. What exactly was it about that piece of property that caused the two men to fly over it repeatedly? That's the question Undersheriff Bill Gastner faces as he and his crew dig into the crash site. It's not an easy investigation for the undersheriff. His favorite deputy of all time, the implacable Estelle, is moving to Minnesota for her husband's medical practice. Another officer is only a breath or two away from signing on to another law-enforcement agency that pays better. And now, the sheriff is dead. Gastner's long-hoped-for retirement seems more impossible than ever. Indeed, the city council wants him to take on the role of sheriff until the elections. As he continues his investigation, he encounters all manner of characters. There's the tragically demented woman who saw part of the plane crash. But she can't talk much about it. There's another rancher who has a deep-seated hatred for the federal government in all its iterations. It is he who helps create a rather entertaining ending for this book.
You don't need to read the early books in the series to enjoy this. It's a great way to introduce yourself to the series and then go back and fill in the backlist. I'm glad I read all of them up to now, and I'm looking forward to the next one. The author writes so well that he transports you vividly to a fictional county in southwest New Mexico. I have only driven through the state, but if that county were real, it would be a place where I'd love to stop. I'd try to show up at that local restaurant in time for lunch so I could buy Gastner one of his famous plates of Mexican food. He would be a most interesting lunch companion. It's not likely that he'd say much, but what he did say would have merit and would be worth listening to.