Patricia Marques follows up her debut, The Colours of Death, with this sequel in what is an unusual sci-fi crime fiction series set in Lisbon, Portugal, and featuring Policia Judiciara Homicide Inspector Isabel Reis, a 'gifted' officer in a society where there is strong prejudice against the gifted with their telepathic and telekinetic powers. Both Reis and her partner, a man she has come to trust, Aleksandr Voronov, have been placed on minor duties by their boss, Chief Bautista, after the fallout from their last case involving Gabriel Bernardo, who has been writing to her, correspondence she has been ignoring. At long last, they have been assigned a homicide case, the grisly murdered body of a gifted 32 year old woman, Marta Nunes, has turned up at a abandoned fishing port in Cascaio. Reis and Voronov find themselves in charge of a complex, dangerous and politically sensitive investigation and what is really strange is that the murder victim's brain has been fried, something that has Reis particularly worried.
To exacerbate matters, Reis can no longer use the tablets, provided by Michael, now her sister Rita's fiance, to help manage her 'gift'. She can feel her powers are increasing considerably and her sensitivities to the outside world make for difficulties in living a normal life, her struggles lead her to seek out her old trainer, Rosario, for help. As the police begin to dig into Nunes past life, they find she was a valued worker at a youth club for the gifted, but for some inexplicable reason she had resigned from the job that she loved, and it seems that a teenager, Alma Pontes, went missing around the same time as Nunes. There have been rumours and conspiracy theories focused on the numbers of the gifted that had disappeared for some time, there is some connection between the murdered Nunes and some of the vanished, did she help them or was her involvement a more sinister affair?
I really enjoyed this sequel, but there are problems in the storytelling, in the first half there are plotting, characterisation and pacing issues, making it a 3 star read, but the second half of the book improves so much that it was 5 stars. Overall, this is a great addition to the series, I loved the development in Reis and Voronov's relationship, and as police officers, they are lucky to have such a terrific battle hardened and able boss in Chief Bautista. Despite some issues with this sequel, I look forward with anticipation to the next in this offbeat crime series. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.