This was a harsh read for me. I already had my misgivings with the first book, and the second one in the series was no better, for multiple reasons.
Athreya, for some reason, lands up in a village/town/archaeological dig at the behest of a foundation head (lazily named Bates, which I'm presuming is Gates of Bill Gates Foundation) who wants to investigate a crime that has not happened yet, based on anonymous letters (?). Straight off the bat, lost my interest there. For starters, anonymous letters in this age and day, is nearly impossible. Who sends letters anyway? Indian Government?
Anyway, random pieces of information are flung around: A boomer-uncle level discourse on the career of archaeology, an isle or islet or island, never understood what it was, a motley team that is so synthetic, followed by a floor map of the dig/base or whatever it is, for no reason other than to imitate Agatha Christie.
Then the characters themselves - all one-notes with no emotion and depth. Soon robbery ensues and the inevitable murder occurs. Then logic goes for a toss
For example, there is one character who apparently remembers all the doors and who opened them and when it was opened (lol really?), that makes zero sense. And then the investigation itself is so long drawn out, I lost the threads after a point. I mean, when it is clear that the victim was not killed by an animal, why waste so much time. Nobody was bothered to hunt for the weapon.
The ending was so unsatisfying, unfortunately. Could have forgiven everything - the characters, the loose story meant for kids, the bad plotting. What I could not forgive at all, was the terrible language. I mean, typos apart, the prose was generally below par, even for a detective novel.
Will probably read the next one, only based on reviews. Wasted my time. :(