The 23rd book in the Joe Pickett series continues in much the same vein as the last 8 or 9, following the exploits of the Wyoming game warden as he gets himself caught up in extreme situations due largely to his own stubborn desire to see justice prevail.
So here I am again, back in my happy place of Saddlestring, Twelve Sleep County, Wyoming and Joe Pickett is still at it, game wardening away. He’s still getting himself in trouble with the Governor, his mother-in-law is just as big a pain as usual and Nate Romanowski continues to add his unique touch of outlaw magic. The question of whether his department-issue truck is going to survive in one piece again hangs heavily over his head.
While tracking an injured elk in the teeth of a ferocious snowstorm he spots a dead body lying in the housing of a shed’s extractor fan. The top of the guy’s head had been taken clean off. While taking photos of the scene and trying to understand the purpose of the shed, he’s suddenly shot at by unseen people hidden further up the mountain. With the danger of being shot and the imminent storm, Joe has to leave the scene. But before he goes he records the coordinates so the sheriff’s department can easily find it.
Of course, because it’s Joe Pickett, the next thing he knows he’s getting a “please see me” request from the Governor and is ordered to keep his nose out of things that don’t concern him. There’s no doubt that something is going on in a tin shed on a mountain outside of Saddlestring and, cursing his own curiosity, Joe Pickett has to follow it through regardless of what the powerful people in the state advise.
As so often happens, what starts out as a single murder grows into something far more significant. The Feds show up and throw their weight around, an extremist group hoping to cause havoc target Joe and even the local sheriff’s department aren’t much help. It comes down to Joe, along with wife Marybeth’s help and even daughter Sheridan who throws her assistance in, to get to the bottom of what’s going on.
Somehow, staggeringly, it has something to do with Bitcoin. Well of course it does.
Because I’ve read every book in the series I’ve settled into an easy rhythm with the Joe Pickett storyline and the recurring characters are like old friends. Somehow, the tiny (fictional) town of Saddlestring appears to be the centre of every criminal money-making enterprise in the US and there’s no exception here. For the sake of the sheer entertainment value, I’m prepared to cut the author some slack here and accept that, in this particular universe, the world revolves around this one small patch of Wyoming.
While Storm Watch features many of the recurring characters from earlier books, this time it’s a little more unusual in that Marybeth Pickett, along with daughter Sheridan, play a significant role in taking down the bad guys. This adds an even more nepotistic feel to the story given that, once again, Missy (Marybeth’s gold-digging, self-absorbed mother) somehow insinuates herself onto the scene and proves to be an ongoing thorn in the Pickett’s collective backsides. Naturally Nate, his falconry expertise and new friend Geronimo get in on the action to complete the team.
Although it feels as though the situations Joe finds himself facing are becoming more and more contrived and the bad guys are less than realistic, this carries on at a fast pace. It’s entertaining with an ironically humorous tone that tends to mask the fact that more than the odd murder takes place through the course of proceedings.