At this point the story begins to be narrated by Abe Teal an
eleven year old boy with a big imagination, dozens of questions, and a mother
who is a detective on the tiny town’s police force. Abe also has a fourteen
year old sister and although he indicates they were very close in the past,
especially after the death of the grandfather they loved so much, she’s growing
up and in her “rough” stages of becoming a woman (at least that’s what his mom
says).
The suspicions start when a new neighbor moves in across the
street, seeming as though he sets off a chain of events including the disappearance
of town road kill, loud noises in the middle of the night, and finally the disappearance
of another young girl. To me it all sounded like a recipe for a good mystery.
Is the neighbor really as shady as he seems or is a red herring? I wanted to
know and was even sure I could deal with the overly exaggerated Southern
accents. And I did stick it out but there was just so much that made me almost
wish I hadn’t.
I did not like any of the characters. Abe’s mother was so
hot headed and emotional that I’m surprised she wasn’t suspended from the force
(she actually pulls a gun on the boy hooking up with her daughter. I mean yes
he is far too old for her but he was not being violent nor did he have a
weapon). Abe would behave like a typical eleven year old but his thoughts
portrayed anything but. His best friend Dewey behaved like an even younger boy
yet he was overly curious about sex, relationships and shooting guns. Abe’s
sister Carrie is the brattiest girl ever. Case in point: her mother, who worked
on the original case and the newer ones, is of course concerned for her
daughter so she allows Carrie to go out on a Saturday only if Carrie is home
before dinner. Carrie returns hours after her curfew. Then she has the gall to
be offended when her mother wants to ground her! Really? There’s someone out there
kidnapping young girls and she really doesn’t understand why she shouldn’t be
doing things like that? If she learned from the situation I might have been
able to forgive her but another girl goes missing and next thing we know Carrie
is sneaking out at night. I’m all for a little teenage rebellion but I’m kind
of offended by the idea that a fourteen year old girl would be more worried
about hooking up with boys when girls her age are being taken.
The biggest issue for me? Abe is only eleven. I understand that
losing your dad when you’re young and growing up with a mom on the police force
would mean you’d grow up fast but whoa boy. Throughout this story his mom
discussed the murder and rape of the first girl in loud voices in the middle of
the living room. She fully knew Abe was listening when she was talking to other
police officers in the department and didn’t stop it. And, when one of the
girls goes missing and then is found, his mother allows him to go to the murder
scene and see the body with its slit throat and everything! And all because she
felt there was something he needed to learn from it. I mean I know it’s good
for kids of all ages to be aware and look out for themselves but do they really
need evidence of rape and murder shoved in their face?
So all in all I liked the setup and the idea of the story
but when it came to believability of the characters and the situations the put
themselves in it fell really flat.