Ryan Francis has the perfect life. A wife and young son at home. A thriving career in marketing, and he's part owner of a local bar / pub. Then one night, leaving the pub after checking on operations, out from the darkness steps his old college friend, Blake. There was a falling out several months back, when Blake demanded to hold the baby and bonked the child's head against a lamp - at which point Ryan's wife, Amanda, put her foot down. It was the last straw - given Blake's general rich boy attitude and his propensity to drink entirely too much. But Blake is now sober and he's finally, after a long stretch of on-again-off-again, is getting married to his long-suffering lady love, Sam. He just needs to ask Ryan one small favor...
During one of his "off" periods with Sam, Blake was seeing a woman named Jennifer, who he met through happenstance because she was an almost-client of Ryan's marketing firm. In fact, Jennifer tried to start a flirtation with Ryan through Facebook Messenger, which he nipped in the bud. Blake was so comfortable around Jennifer, and deep in his cups, wrote letters to her unburdening his soul and spilling secrets. Now that he's set to marry Sam, he wants those letters back - and Jennifer is refusing to cough them up. He asks Ryan to break into her house (he has the alarm code) to get them back. Ryan, naturally, balks at the idea, but Blake twists his arm using the time honored tradition of blackmail.
What is Blake blackmailing Ryan with? When they were in college they were members of a "social club" (a fraternity, it's a fraternity) and in a night of drunken hazing they, and a pledge, get in a car accident that kills a girl and seriously disables another. Ryan was driving and basically black-out drunk - so Blake took Ryan out of the driver's seat and put the pledge, Aaron, behind the wheel. Aaron goes to jail and eaten up by the guilt, Ryan starts leaving anonymous donations in the mailbox of the family with a now disabled daughter. Blake tells Jennifer the truth about that accident in those letters and if the truth comes out? Ryan's perfect life will go up in flames.
So, Ryan goes to Jennifer's house - and what do you think he finds? Not the letters, but Jennifer, dead on her bedroom floor. And then, while standing over Jennifer's body, his phone pings. It's a Facebook friend request...from Jennifer.
What we have here is a story where you can't root for anybody. Ryan who wants everybody to think he's "a good person" but isn't and Blake who is your prototypical silver spoon frat boy whose fortunes have now changed so he's going to use whomever he can (Ryan, his fiancée) to claw his way into the life he thinks he deserves. The villain in this story is actually the "hero" and our villains are those wronged by these two assholes.
Compounding all this is that the writing is cliched and lumpy (a house being locked up "like Fort Knox" and don't get me started on the final line in the book that mentions opposable thumbs being good for many things, like deleting social media apps) and one of the "villains" who monologues for chapters (they're short chapters, but still). We also get some ham-fisted commentary on social media being bad. I should have DNF'ed this fairly early but, of course, I didn't. Why? Because I wanted to find out who killed Jennifer and of course once I found that out I just got more annoyed.
It's a story about man babies who won't take responsibility for their actions and the wreckage they leave in their wake. Seriously boys, man up.
Final Grade = D-