PROTAGONIST: Detec. Sgt. Bev Morriss
SETTING: Birmingham, UK
SERIES: #4 of 4
RATING: 4.25
Detective Sergeant Bev Morriss (Birmingham, UK) is the kind of person that you want working on those hard-to-solve cases that come up in a police department. Intelligent, driven, competent—she has a way of homing in on the evidence, using both the facts and her intuition, and producing a result. But things have changed for Bev. She was brutally raped and has not been the same ever since. She hides her feelings of vulnerability under a hard crust; instead of empathizing with the victims of the crimes that she is working on, she finds that she is alienating them. And that's the last thing she wants to do when working on the case of an abducted 5-year-old boy. She needs the parents' cooperation; she feels that they know something that they aren't revealing.
Little Daniel Page was picked up from school by someone who looked almost exactly like his mother. He's been missing for days, and there haven't been any ransom demands. As you can imagine, the parents are frantic to find him. The more time that passes by, the more they disintegrate. Although Bev suspects that they are hiding something, the investigation is pretty much at a dead end until a demand is finally made. Meanwhile, Bev has gone through a few partners who have difficulty with her bristly personality. Finally, she meets her match in DS Mac Tyler, who doesn't hesitate to confront Bev when she needs it.
At the same time, Bev's superior officer, Superintendent Byford, is dealing with a puzzling case of his own. It seems that someone is targeting a group of police officers who were involved in a hit-and-run incident many years before. Nobody but Byford is aware of the link between the various deaths of this group of men; it's likely that he will be targeted as well, since he was a part of the incident. There is an attraction between Bev and Byford; it's interesting to see how this relationship develops both on and off the job.
I found HARD TIME to be a first-rate book. The procedural aspects of the various investigations in the department were very realistically portrayed. There were three major inquiries that were covered in the narrative; the Birmingham department was completely stretched. Carter did an excellent job of showing the pressures faced by the entire department, from top to bottom.
I really liked the various characters in the book, most especially Bev Morriss and Mac Tyler. As Bev's brittle façade begins to crack, you can see the proud and passionate woman that she had once been. She'll always be "Morriss the Mouth", but her usual self has fewer sharp edges than her damaged version. I did have a bit of difficulty with the slang used in the book. It wasn't incomprehensible but occasionally made me stop to figure out what was meant.
I liked the author's approach and the lead character so much that I have ordered the first 3 books in this series. I guess you could say I put my money where my mouth is!