When I discovered April Wilson's MacIntyre Security series I binge-read them all. And throughout the books I kept waiting for the story of Mack and Erin. I desperately wanted to know how they would get together. What would happen to them. So when this book was finally released I couldn't read it fast enough. I was desperate to reconnect with some of my favourite characters.
I did reconnect with them. And I loved the story, heartbreaking as it was. However I was also left disappointed. I REALLY wanted to love this book. And in some ways I do as Ms Wilson has created a wonderful cast and has interwoven their stories beautifully. I still love Mack and Erin. I'm still blown away by the path they had to take to find peace in each other. But even though I itched to be able to give this book five or even four stars, I just couldn't, because all the things I loved are the things that the story is imbued with solely because of the strength of the ten books standing behind "Regret". On its own, it is a relatively poor shadow of Ms Wilson's previous achievements and I cannot help but feel like she got weary or frustrated or else got pushed into publishing this book at least one or two revisions away from it being a polished work.
SPOILERS AHEAD -------------------
I know that the author is capable of handling very tough subjects with sensitivity, and that she's also capable of giving her characters the space to make their transformation in a believable manner while at the same time wrapping the suspense of the plot around the character development. There is no such achievement here. "Regret" is in effect two books - a short hunt for the serial killer, and then a stilted romance story of recovery. There are so many missed opportunities to take the two beloved characters through their journey while delivering the level of suspense that Ms Wilson has done with other books. Lets begin with the perpetrator - the search to locate them is almost desultory and laughably easy. Mack and his partner find him with almost no effort, and his story is over with only a little bit of fuss and resistance. There is not even the slightest bit of effort to unravel his motive, making him the most uninteresting and underwhelming bad guy ever. This seems strange after the author goes through the trouble of setting him up as a serial killer. She drops hints about his attacks being driven by deep seated hate, and that the looks of the three women bore similarities, teasing a possible motive but this thread is abandoned. Once the bad guy is gone, all non-sexual tension is released from the book at the barely half way point. Given the reaction of the bad guy to Mack showing up I honestly expected there to be some feint - that the guy turned out to be the wrong one, and that the killer was still out there threatening Erin without anyone's knowledge until some sort of tense climax but nope. Ms Wilson even goes so far as to introduce a frightening new secondary character named Zaretti to back up Mack, taking pains to emphasize his purpose as the guy who gets his hands dirty, and in the end he barely lifts a finger when Jamison shoots the bad guy and then he vanishes never to be seen again. Anti-climactic doesn't even cover it.
The second part of the book, dedicated exclusively to Erin's recovery and her relationship with Mack, is similarly full of threads that look like tantalising opportunities to develop the character relationship but are then swiftly abandoned. The most important character in all this is, of course Erin, but we actually get very little insight into her emotional journey. There's a brief mention of her attending a therapist, but little dialogue or discussion of how she finds her way past her belief of the attack being her fault. And although there are numerous scenes where the secondary characters are clearly aware of her distress and her need for help, Ms Wilson doesn't try to engage any of them in dialogue about what the implications of sexual assault are on a person for recovery. There's no attempt for Beth or Mack to try and understand the motivations behind Erin's refusal to see Mack at the beginning. Given that the MacIntyre clan consistes of quite strong women all of whom have encountered violence in some form of another, I am very surprised that Ms Wilson chose not to have one or two of them discuss their own experiences with Erin as a way of helping her process her own feelings. As a result, Erin's process of recovery feels rushed, as if the author is simply ticking boxes on her way to the ending. It is the first time in the MacIntyre series where I felt the emotional journey of one of her characters following a trauma was implausibly orchestrated. It's not that it can't happen, but it happens too fast, making it feel contrived.
Then there's Mack. I've accepted from the beginning that the men in the MacIntyre series are all just a shade too perfect and Mack is the same. But that's the reason we as readers fall in love with the characters. Mack's strength and protectiveness over Erin are not flaws in the book. But again, Ms Wilson misses a fantastic opportunity to not only flesh him out, but use his character as a tool to prompt Erin down her own path of recovery. Mack undergoes only one significant change in the book - he goes from being completely opposed to getting involved with Erin to accepting that life is too short and there is no good reason for him not to love her. But all other nuances of his reasons for staying away seem to get lost. We spend ages hearing him say that he's not only too old, but too tainted for someone as "pure" as Erin, too much affected by his past and his work. However none of this manifests once Mack accepts that he wants to have her. There's a brief allusion to Mack occasionally having nightmares, but even though the hint is dropped, nothing is done with it. Ms Wilson could have easily turned the tables on the couple three fourths of the way through the book - having Mack wake up from a nightmare and giving Erin a glimpse into his own tortured past. The subsequent discussion could have easily given the opportunity to address their misconceptions about themselves and each other. It could have been a great tool to empower Erin to not only accept help from Mack, but to give comfort in return. And it would have given Mack more depth to allow him to show that weakness and darkness to Erin and discover that she is made of sterner stuff.
I want to reiterate that I love the characters. I also think that Ms Wilson did a great job with the secondary cast, as usual. I was delighted to see a softer side of Shane come out with someone other than Beth. The presence of Erin even manages to remove the ever present stick-up-his-behind from Detective Jamison. I loved seeing the insightful Sam looking after both Beth and Erin. I'm even curious to find out more about this dark and mysterious Dominic Zaretti. And although difficult to read, I love the journey that Ms Wilson mapped out for my two favourite characters, Erin and Mack. However I know from her previous books that she can do so much better about the detail than she has managed to here. I hope that at some point in future she takes another stab at it and revises this story into something fuller and fleshier, because then I think it truly has the potential to be a magnificent five star read.