The Cyclist is the second book in Tim Sullivan’s eight-book DS Cross series. As with the titles of the other books in the series, the title of this one describes the profession of the victim of the crime Cross and his team will be investigating.
DS George Cross is a Bristol detective who is somewhere on the autism spectrum. He is not an easy man to work with or to befriend, but he is a brilliant detective with the highest conviction rate on the entire police force. Cross pays attention to detail, and combines logic and intense focus on the tiniest of clues to reveal a victim’s hidden lives and motivations - often leading him directly to their killer.
As Cross writes him, George Cross is a very sympathetic character, but he is so socially awkward that he often comes across as rude without any idea that he is doing so. He hates noise, crowds large and small, and has never mastered the skill of making small talk or reading the emotions of others. Thus, his lack of friends.
But George, largely thanks to input from his department partner Josie Ottey, is not unaware of the way others react to him, and he is working hard to make himself more acceptable to others.
He often spent time observing people. Sometimes from Tony’s cafĂ©, where he would have breakfast every morning. He was a bit of a student of human behaviour. Not because of his work but because he learnt from it. He tried to observe, to understand the way people worked, in an attempt to fit himself in a little more easily. It had mixed results…"
This time around, Cross and his team are investigating the murder of a man whose body was found inside an abandoned building. Using clues only he could piece together, Cross quickly determines that the brutally murdered man is a cyclist, a fact that leads directly to the man’s quick identification. Then once the victim has been identified, Cross begins to peel back his life layer by layer until all is revealed. This is a mystery involving high level competitive cycling, performance enhancing drugs, sibling rivalry, financial pressures, family feuds, and a romance gone off the rails. Everyone of any importance in the victim’s life seems to be hiding something, and what they are hiding is usually enough to give them good reason to want to see Alex Paphides dead.
The Cyclist comes with an abundance of suspects.
Good luck.