Inspired by a true a supposedly empty rental truck is being readied for a customer, and when the back door opens, the funky smell turns out to be a body in a plastic trash bag. Detective Fred "Tree" Stumpf gets the murder case and begins sleuthing. Something's going on at the U-Drive_Em; mileages are being reassigned, the surveillance cameras develop glitches, and employees are getting conflicting orders. Soon, Detective Jerry Redding's case starts overlapping, and both detectives in the mid-size Indiana city are working again with each other, sorting out their respective cases and closing in on an interstate smuggling ring, Salvadoran illegals, Cuban green-card holders posing as Mexicans, the truck rental's father-daughter ownership team, and a crook named after a pasta who somehow has made a carpenter, a family man, rich beyond his dreams. And they close in on all the criminals as they solve all the crimes, and come up with a surprise ending. If you like twists, dogs, teens and toddlers, money, cigarettes, cops and crime, liars and killers, all in a mental maze that adults will get lost in and even middle-schoolers can read, read this.
Tim Kern has written and published nonfiction since 1990, including over a thousand features in magazines and three books. His fiction career began in 2016.
When an ordinary person kills somebody, he doesn’t know what to do, and that makes him harder to catch. I enjoyed the difficulty the experienced detectives had, trying to figure out the amateur killer.