It’s a pleasure to be re-reading this series, one book straight after another. The backdrop to this book is the Lloyd’s Names financial scandal of the 1980s and 1990s, where individual investors (known as “Names”) had potentially unlimited personal liability for insurance losses, particularly those arising out of asbestos claims in the US. I don’t claim to know the rights and wrongs of the real-life story, but it’s interesting that the Names in this book are by no means all portrayed in a favourable light, notwithstanding the way they had allegedly been treated. Leo Davies, the barrister who leads the claim for the Names, is as morally reprehensible as ever. Although married to the vulnerable Rachel, who has borne him a son, Leo has no compunction about seeking to seduce one of his male clients (who – naturally! – has his own designs on Rachel) or to bed the female family nanny. In comparison, his chambers colleague Anthony Cross is a paragon of virtue, although when you look closely, his treatment of women does also leave something to be desired. I can’t remember from my last reading of the series whether Leo and Anthony ever get it together sexually, but the sexual undercurrent between them is so strong that I suspect they do. One of the delights for me of the series is the minor characters – Felicity, formerly Rachel’s inept secretary in Book 1 (or was it Book 2?), is now doing well as a wheeling and dealing barristers’ clerk at 5 Caper Court. And I’m sure that in the next book the devious Sarah will be causing mischief at Caper Court in her new role there as a pupil barrister … It's all very soap opera-like, notwithstanding the legal setting, but easy reading and great fun.