Into The Fog is the third (and so far best) book in the rural crime series which features Georgie Harvey and John Franklin, by award-winning Australian author, Sandi Wallace. While Senior Constable John Franklin is stuck in Ballarat doing some deadly-boring covert surveillance as part of his Detective training, his girlfriend, journalist Georgie Harvey is part of the team supervising a five-day camp for troubled Daylesford kids at Mount Dandenong. This is not quite as planned, but they are a capable group (four adults, two teens) looking after eight kids.
Circumstances also mean they are not at their intended venue, and their host and his staff act a little strangely, but the camp team’s plans to keep the kids active and entertained are not really derailed by the wild weather that has suddenly hit. Then, as the skies darken early with the storm, twelve-year-old Hannah Savage and her two younger brothers are discovered to be missing.
The responsibility weighs heavily on Sergeant Tim Lunny and Constable Sam Tesorino: to lose three children in their care is unthinkable. Buildings and grounds are quickly searched, to no avail, and the local police alerted. But it soon becomes apparent that Hannah planned her disappearance. It seems this determined pre-teen has made a common error online, and connected to an undesirable. The press are quick to tie this to the earlier disappearance of a teenaged girl, perhaps for headline value, but is there any real connection?
Franklin feels impelled to join the search, although the Daylesford cops soon find themselves frustrated to be excluded by the task force, citing their initial involvement and the need to maintain impartiality. But the good rapport that Franklin has built in his role as Youth Liaison in Daylesford ensures that Hannah’s friends are forthcoming with information when it is needed.
Not just a few cops work extra hours behind the scenes, some putting their jobs on the line with the sole intention of finding three missing kids. Much will be asked of Georgie over the next few days, and the last thing that she needs is a phone call from her ex, A.J. to distract her at this stressful time.
Wallace gives the reader a fast-paced mystery, with the action taking place over a mere five days. The narrative is split between the members of team looking for the Savage kids: Franklin, Georgie, and Sam. Wallace throws in a few red herrings early on but passages from Hannah’s perspective, which precede some chapters, eventually make her fate clear.
And despite mounting evidence implicating a certain person, Franklin and his team try to keep minds open to all possibilities: “The biggest regret of a copper was having ignored other possibilities when what they’d fixated on turned out to be a dead-end.”
Wallace draws attention to several topics in this story, including the practicalities and problems inherent such an operation: the influx of police and volunteers, all needing food, accommodation, and coordination; possible casualties among searchers; the double-edged sword of social media, offering viral spread of information but also toxic comments; and the parental anguish.
It is refreshing to read a story in which there are realistic time frames; in which red tape and procedure cause frustrating delays; in which, despite many people working in the background, results are not instant like on TV; and in which procedural rules may restrict what information can be followed up, depending on the source (confidential informants, or obtained by not strictly legal means).
The third instalment of Harvey and Franklin is another excellent piece of crime fiction: taut, tension-filled, and with a nail-biting finish. Readers of earlier Harvey and Franklin books may wonder if Sandi Wallace can maintain that high standard. The answer is a most-assured yes. More, please!
With thanks to the author for this proof copy to read and review